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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE 

U -s BUREAU OF THE CENSUS 

WM. J. HARRIS, Director 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS 

1910 


Second Edition 
June, 1914 



WASHINGTON 

GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 
1914 






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JUL 30 1914 





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CONTENTS. 


. 4 .' 



Page. 

Introduction. 11-14 

Previous reports. 11 

Thirteenth Census Report (1910). 12 

Period covered by the report. 12 

Scope of the report.:. 12 

Classes of institutions included. 

Information furnished. 

Special features. 

State legislation and supervision. 

State boards of charities. 

General summaries of statistics of benevolent institu¬ 
tions . 

Institutions, inmates, and finances of institutions. 

Comparative summary 7 , 1910 and 1904. 

Distribution of institutions, inmates, and persons re¬ 
ceived, by class of institution. 

Distribution of finances of institutions, by class of 

institution. 

Information furnished. 

Significance of figures reported. 

Statistics for individual classes of institutions. 

Class I.—Institutions for the care of children. 

Classes of children received. 

Methods of management. 

Cottage system. 

Placement in families. 

Comparison with report for 1904... 


Page. 

Statistics for individual classes of institutions—Contd. 

Class II.—Societies for the protection and care of children 34-38 


Information furnished. 34 

Children placed. 35 

Receiving homes. 35 

Class III.—Homes for the care of adults or adults and 

children. 38-46 

Comparison with report for 1904. 40 

Permanent and temporary homes. 40 

Permanent homes. 43 

Temporary homes. 44 

Sex and age of inmates. 46 

Class IV.—Hospitals and sanitariums. 46-50 

Classes of institutions included. 46 

Medical and nursing staff. 46 

Patients reported. 47 

Dispensaries. 47 

Treatment of tuberculosis. 47 

Class V.—Dispensaries. 50-52 

Class VI.—Institutions for the blind and deaf. 53-57 

Special summaries. 57-84 

Sex and age of inmates. 57 

Placement of children. 65 

Supervising agencies of institutions. 68 

Finances of institutions. 72 

Comparison with report for 1904 . 72 

Institutions under governmental care. 80 


12 
13 
13 

13 

14 

15-25 

15 

17 

18 

22 
22 
22 
26-57 
26-33 
26 
26 
27 
30 
30 

PRINCIPAL TABLES. 


Page. 

General summary, by divisions and states. 16 

Comparative summary, by divisions and states, 1910 and 1904. 17 

Institutions, by class of institution. 19 

Inmates of institutions, by class of institution. 20 

Persons received into institutions, by class of institution .... 21 

Receipts of institutions, by class of institution. 23 

Payments of institutions, by class of institution. 24 

Value of property of institutions, by class of institution. 25 

Distribution of institutions for the care of children, by 

divisions and states... 27 

General summary of institutions for the care of children. ... 28, 29 
Children in institutions for the care of children, 1910 and 1904. 31 

Children received into institutions for the care of children, 

classified according to type. 32 

Children in institutions for the care of children, classified 

according to agencies through which received. 33 

General summary of societies for the protection and care of 

children. 36, 37 

General summary of homes for the care of adults or adults and 

children. 39 

Comparative summary of homes for the care of adults or 

adults and children, 1910 and 1904. 40 

Inmates of permanent and temporary homes. 41 

Persons received into permanent and temporary homes. 42 

Inmates of permanent homes. 43 

Persons received into temporary homes. 45 


Page. 

General summary of hospitals and sanitariums. 48, 49 

Institutions for the treatment of tuberculosis. 50 

Dispensaries operated by hospitals or independently. 51 

General summary of dispensaries. 52 

General summary of institutions for the blind and deaf. 54, 55 

Persons under care of institutions at close of the year, by sex 

and age. 58, 59 

Persons received into institutions during the year, by sex 

and age. 60, 61 

Children in institutions at close of year, by sex. 62, 63 

Adults in institutions at close of year, by sex. 64 

General summary of child-placing. 66 

Institutions classified according to supervising agency. 68 

Inmates of institutions, classified according to supervising 

agency. 70, 71 

Receipts of institutions from public appropriations. 73 

Receipts of institutions from donations. 74 

Receipts of institutions from care of inmates.' ... 75 

Running expenses of institutions. 76 

Value of land, buildings, and equipment owned by institu¬ 
tions. 77 

Value of invested funds owned by institutions. 78 

Institutions under Federal care. 81 

Institutions under state care. 82 

Institutions under county care. 83 

Institutions under municipal care. 84 


( 3 ) 



























































































4 


CONTENTS 


GENERAL TABLES. 


Table I. —Institutions for the Care of Children. 


Page. 


Alabama. 86 

Arizona. 86 

Arkansas. 86 

California. 86 

Colorado. 90 

Connecticut. 90 

Delaware... 92 

District of Columbia. 92 

Florida. 94 

Georgia. 94 

Idaho. 96 

Illinois. 96 

Indiana. 100 

Iowa. 102 

Kansas. 104 

Kentucky. 104 

Louisiana. 106 

Maine. 108 

Maryland. 108 

Massachusetts. 110 

Michigan. 112 

Minnesota. 114 

Mississippi. 116 

Missouri. 116 

Montana. 118 


Page. 


Nebraska. 118 

Nevada. 118 

New Hampshire. 118 

New Jersey. 120 

New Mexico. 122 

New York. 122 

North Carolina. 132 

North Dakota. 134 

Ohio. 134 

Oklahoma. 140 

Oregon. 140 

Pennsylvania. 140 

Rhode Island. 148 

South Carolina. 148 

South Dakota. 148 

Tennessee. 148 

Texas. 150 

Utah. 150 

Vermont. 152 

Virginia. 152 

Washington. 154 

West Virginia. 154 

Wisconsin. 154 

Wyoming. 156 


Table II. —Societies for the Protection and Care of 
Children. 


Page. 


Alabama. 158 

Arkansas. 158 

California. 158 

Colorado. 158 

Connecticut. 158 

Delaware. 158 

District of Columbia. 158 

Florida. 158 

Idaho. 158 

Illinois. 158 

Indiana. 160 

Iowa. 160 

Kansas. 160 

Kentucky. 162 

Maine. 162 

Maryland. 162 

Massachusetts. 162 

Michigan. 162 

Minnesota. 162 

Missouri. 164 

Montana. 164 


Page. 


Nebraska. 164 

New Hampshire. 164 

New Jersey. 164 

New Mexico. 164 

New York. 164 

North Carolina. 166 

North Dakota. 168 

Ohio. 168 

Oklahoma. 168 

Oregon. 168 

Pennsylvania. 168 

Rhode Island. 170 

South Carolina. 170 

South Dakota. 170 

Tennessee. 170 

Texas. 170 

Virginia. 172 

Washington. 172 

W r est Virginia. 172 

Wisconsin. 172 


Table III. —Homes for the Care of Adults or Adults and 
Children. 


Page. 


Alabama. 174 

Arizona. 174 

Arkansas. 174 

California. 174 

Colorado. 178 

Connecticut. 178 

Delaware... 1 . 180 

District of Columbia. 180 

Florida. 182 

Georgia. 182 

Idaho. 184 

Illinois. 184 

Indiana. 188 

Iowa. 192 

Kansas. 192 

Kentucky. 194 

Louisiana.... 196 

Maine. 196 

Maryland. 198 

Massachusetts. 200 

Michigan. 206 

Minnesota. 208 

Mississippi. 210 

Missouri. 210 


Page. 

Montana. 212 

Nebraska. 212 

New Hampshire. 214 

New Jersey. 214 

New Mexico. 218 

New York. 218 

North Carolina. 230 

North Dakota. 230 

Ohio. 232 

Oklahoma. 236 

Oregon. 236 

Pennsylvania. 236 

Rhode Island. 246 

South Carolina. 248 

South Dakota. 248 

Tennessee. 248 

Texas. 250 

Utah. 250 

Vermont. 252 

Virginia. 252 

Washington. 254 

West Virginia. 254 

Wisconsin. 254 

W-yoming. 256 


Table IV. —Hospitals and Sanitariums. 


Page. 


Alabama. 258 

Arizona. 258 

Arkansas. 258 

California. 260 

Colorado. 262 

Connecticut. 266 

Delaware. 268 

District of Columbia. 268 

Florida. 268 

Georgia. 270 

Idaho. 270 

Illinois. 272 

Indiana. 278 

Iowa. 282 

Kansas. 284 

Kentucky. 286 

Louisiana. 288 

Maine. 288 

Maryland. 290 

Massachusetts. 292 

Michigan. 300 

Minnesota. 302 

Mississippi. 306 

Missouri. 308 

i 


Page. 


Montana. 310 

Nebraska. 310 

New Hampshire. 312 

New Jersey. 314 

New Mexico. 318 

New York. 318 

North Carolina. 334 

North Dakota. 334 

Ohio. 336 

Oklahoma. 340 

Oregon. 340 

Pennsylvania. 342 

Rhode Island. 352 

South Carolina. 352 

South Dakota. 352 

Tennessee. 354 

Texas. 354 

Utah. 356 

Vermont. 356 

Virginia. 358 

Washington. 360 

West Virginia. 362 

Wisconsin. 362 

W r yoming. 364 



































































































































































































CONTENTS. 


5 


Table V. — Dispensaries. 


Page. 


Alabama. 366 

Arizona. 366 

Arkansas. 366 

Califoinia. 366 

Colorado. 366 

Connecticut. 366 

Delaware. 366 

District of Columbia. 366 

Georgia. 368 

Illinois. 368 

Indiana. 368 

Iowa. 370 

Kansas. 370 

Kentucky. 370 

Louisiana. 370 

Maine. 370 

Maryland. 370 

Massachusetts. 372 

Michigan. 372 

Minnesota. 374 


Page. 


Missouri. 374 

Montana. 374 

Nebraska. 374 

New Jersey. 376 

New Mexico. 376 

New York. 376 

North Carolina. 382 

Ohio. 384 

Oregon. 384 

Pennsylvania. 384 

Rhode Island. 396 

South Carolina. 396 

South Dakota. 396 

Tennessee. 396 

Texas. 396 

Virginia. 396 

Washington. 396 

West Virginia. 398 

Wisconsin. 398 


Table VI.—Institutions 


Page. 

Alabama. 400 

Arkansas. 400 

California. 400 

Colorado. 400 

Connecticut. 400 

District of Columbia. 400 

Florida. 400 

Georgia. 400 

Idaho. 400 

Illinois. 400 

Indiana. 402 

Iowa. . J. 402 

Kansas. 402 

Kentucky. 402 

Louisiana. 402 

Maine. 402 

Maryland. 402 

Massachusetts. 402 

Michigan. 404 

Minnesota. 404 

I Mississippi. 404 


for the Blind and Deaf. 

Page. 


Missouri.. 404 

Montana. 404 

Nebraska. 404 

New Jersey. 404 

New Mexico. 406 

New York. 406 

North Carolina. 408 

North Dakota. 408 

Ohio. 408 

Oklahoma. 408 

Oregon. 408 

Pennsylvania. 408 

Rhode Island. 410 

South Carolina. 410 

South Dakota. 410 

Tennessee. 410 

Texas. 410 

Utah. 410 

Virginia. 410 

West Virginia. 410 

Wisconsin. 410 
























































































































LETTER OF TRANSMITTAL 


DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE, 


Sir: 


Bureau of the Census, 
Washington, D. C., December 18, 1918. 


I have the honor to transmit herewith a report on the benevolent institutions of the United States. 

This report contains statistics relating to institutions for the care of children, societies for the protection and 
care of children, homes for the care of adults or adults and children, hospitals, dispensaries, and institutions for 
the blind and deaf, showing the name, location, and supervisory agency of each institution for which data was 
secured and the class of inmates received by each, the movement of institutional population, the number of 
employees, and certain statistics pertaining to equipment, financial transactions, and property valuations, the 
whole forming a handbook and directory for use in organized or individual philanthropy as complete as it has 
been possible to prepare. 

The report was prepared by Dr. Edwin M. Bliss, under the supervision of Dr. Joseph A. Hill, expert special 
agent in charge of the special census on institutions and institutional population. The list of institutions included 
in the canvass was prepared by Mr. John Ivoren of Boston, formerly special agent of the Census Bureau. 

Very respectfully, 


Hon. William C. Kedfield, 

Secretary of Commerce. ( 7 ) 











































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BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS 


( 9 ) 

















































































































































































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BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 


INTRODUCTION. 


The Report on Benevolent Institutions is one of a 
series of reports, issued by the Bureau of the Census, 
on institutions for the relief and care of the dependent 
and delinquent classes. The other reports of the series 
cover almshouses, penal institutions, and institutions 
for the insane and feeble-minded, while this report in¬ 
cludes homes of various types for adults or children, 
organizations for the protection and care of children, 
and institutions for the sick or disabled and for the 
blind and deaf. The institutions covered by the other 
reports are mostly public in character, while those cov¬ 
ered by the present report are chiefly private. In the 
other reports the emphasis is on the inmates, the infor¬ 
mation furnished corresponding closely to that pro¬ 
vided in the census reports on population; the present 
report, on the other hand, emphasizes the type of insti¬ 
tution, giving in each case its location and describing 
its purpose, the class of inmates received, and its finan¬ 
cial status, and might thus be designated as a direc¬ 
tory of benevolent institutions. 

PREVIOUS REPORTS. 

Apparently the first effort to present a survey of the 
charities of the United States was made in connection 
with the Seventh Census taken in 1850. That report 
showed the number of paupers supported wholly or in 
part at public expense within the year preceding, and 
the actual number in institutions on June 1 , 1850, 
together with their nativity, and certain other par¬ 
ticulars. It was felt, however, that as this took no 
notice of those supported or relieved by individual 
charities, it was not complete, and a special effort was 
made in 1854 to supply the lack. The returns, how¬ 
ever, were unsatisfactory, and were never presented 
in full. 

The Eighth Census (1860) confined itself to a report 
on the inmates of almshouses. 

The Ninth Census (1870) took the same course, on 
the ground that the “ framers of the Census law did 
not have it in contemplation that the beneficiaries of 
hospitals, dispensaries, and asylums distinctly for the 
blind, sick, or insane would be embraced in the 
returns/’ enforcing this conclusion by a reference to 
the eleemosynary character of educational institu¬ 
tions, due to their large endowments, which would 
necessitate their inclusion in any complete review of 
benevolences. 

The Tenth Census (1880) recognized the very close 
relations existing between institutions for public and 


private relief of the poor, but the difficulty connected 
with a similar enumeration of the inmates of the two 
classes of institutions resulted in the decision to limit 
the investigation of private benevolences to institu¬ 
tions for homeless children. The report in regard to 
these was quite complete, giving the number of 
“ Homeless children in almshouses, in families of out¬ 
door paupers, and in all institutions of a benevolent 
or beneficent character, including orphan asylums, 
homes for children, homes for the aged, friendless, 
etc., also those having no given habitation.” These 
were also classified according to sex, race, and 
nativity. 

The Eleventh Census (1890) placed the statistics of 
benevolent institutions on the same basis as those for 
almshouses, prisons, etc., and called for, as nearly as 
possible, the same information as to their inmates as for 
the population at large. While the arrangement was 
by classes of institutions, probably as the most con¬ 
venient way of securing returns, the results were set 
forth by characteristics of inmates and the institutional 
element practically dropped out of sight, the emphasis 
being upon the inmates. 

The classification of institutions was as follows: (1) 
Those for children, with an occasional adult element; 

(2) those for adults, with an occasional child element; 

(3) hospitals and infirmaries; and (4) miscellaneous, 
such as homes for discharged prisoners and for mag- 
dalens, inebriate asylums, etc. 

The inmates were classified by sex, age, color, na¬ 
tivity and race, naturalization, legal residence, liter¬ 
acy, education, ability to speak English, marital con¬ 
dition, health (whether in good health, ill, insane, 
blind, deaf-mutes, idiots, crippled), occupations prior 
to admission to institutions, and cause of depend¬ 
ence. The classification of children in institutions was 
further extended to cover the questions of legitimacy, 
orphanage, abandonment, and institutional births. 
The statistics were arranged in a great variety of 
combinations, so as to make the presentation as com¬ 
plete as possible. It appeared, however, that the 
replies were by no means satisfactory, and although 
the percentage of error, in the view of the writer of the 
report, was not such as to invalidate conclusions, it was 
large enough to raise a question as to the real value 
of the investigation, in view of the labor and expense 
involved and the degree of completeness attained. 

Under the law governing the Twelfth Census (1900), 
the enumeration of special classes could not be under- 

(ll) 




12 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 


taken until the census of population, vital statistics, 
agriculture, and manufactures had been completed. 
By that time the permanent Census Bureau had been 
established, with authority to conduct these investi¬ 
gations, and the reports on paupers, insane, feeble¬ 
minded, prisoners, and inmates of benevolent institu¬ 
tions, were made as for the year 1904. All except the 
last were conducted along the same lines that had been 
followed in previous censuses, classifying the inmates 
by age, sex, nativity, race, etc. 

For the report on Benevolent Institutions, however, 
an entirely different plan was adopted. The regular 
census enumerators were not available, the appoint¬ 
ment of special agents for a large number of small insti¬ 
tutions would have involved an expense out of pro¬ 
portion to the value of the results obtained, and it 
was decided to gather the information by correspond¬ 
ence with the institutions themselves. This method 
made it especially difficult to secure the type of in¬ 
formation set forth in the reports for the Eleventh 
Census. Comparatively few private institutions keep 
any records of race, nativity, literacy, etc. In many 
cases those in charge, while excellent superintendents, 
matrons, etc., are entirely unfitted for preparing a 
detailed report as to the inmates, and not infrequently 
seem to resent a request for such information. The 
result was that the report became a “Directory of 
Benevolent Institutions,” with merely enough of sta¬ 
tistics to give an idea of the size of each particular 
home or hospital. The items covered included the 
name and location of the institution; how it was super¬ 
vised and maintained; the year of establishment; 
its specific object; the number of inmates at the com¬ 
mencement and close of the year, and the number re¬ 
ceived during the year; the number of paid employees; 
the amounts received from public funds and from pay 
inmates; and the total annual cost of maintenance. 
In the tables for orphanages and homes there was a 
classification by sex, and the distinction between 
adults and children was recognized, but there was no 
effort to show age periods, so that the term “child” 
covered the period from infancy to majority, and an 
adult might be 18 or 70 years of age. Furthermore, 
the period covered by the financial statement was 
different from that covered by the record of inmates. 

THIRTEENTH CENSUS REPORT (1910). 

Period covered by the report.—The law providing for 
the Thirteenth Census reverted to the original plan 
and made the institutional census contemporaneous 
with the decennial census of population. Accordingly 
the period covered by the present report is the calendar 
year 1910. It appeared, however, in the case of a num¬ 
ber of institutions, that the fiscal or institutional year 
did not coincide with the calendar year, so that it was 
exceedingly difficult to secure exact figures for the cal¬ 
endar year. In such cases, reports were accepted for 


the fiscal or institutional year when it closed in the 
early half of 1911, which was found to be sufficiently 
accurate for the purpose of the report. 

Scope of the report.—The scope of this report is essen¬ 
tially the same as that of the report for 1904, and is 
indicated by the classes of institutions included and 
the nature of the information furnished in regard to 
them. 

Classes of institutions included .—The institutions 
covered by the investigation may be classified under 
the following general heads: 

I. Institutions for the care of children. 

II. Societies for the protection and care of children. 

III. Homes for the care of adults, or adults and children. 

IV. Hospitals and sanitariums. 

V. Dispensaries. 

VI. Institutions for the blind and deaf. 

Certain changes from the report of 1904 should be 
noted. Day nurseries, included then with orphanages 
and children’s homes, have been omitted; societies for 
the prevention of cruelty to children, children’s aid 
societies, and other similar organizations have been 
brought together as a distinct class; dispensaries, 
formerly included with hospitals, have been classed 
by themselves; and the distinction between permanent 
and temporary homes for adults and children has been 
dropped and both classes have been united under the 
head of homes for the care of adults, or adults and 
children. 

Thh classification, while perhaps the best available, 
is not completely satisfactory. Many institutions 
might easily be placed in either of two classes; others 
have developed quite differently from their avowed 
purpose; and still others seem to fit into no class. 
There are foundling asylums and children’s hospitals 
which might be included under either Class I or Class 
IV; homes for incurables, convalescents, and the like 
which might be included under either Class III or 
Class IV; societies included under Class II which are 
practically of the same type as institutions included 
under Class I. 

Confusion arises also from the difficulty of deter¬ 
mining the line between adults and children; strictly, 
all minors are children, yet to include under Class I a 
rescue home merely because the inmates are under their 
majority is scarcely fitting. Accordingly, in general, 
the principal object of an institution has determined 
the class to which it was assigned. 

Another perplexing problem arose in connection with 
the decision as to what are the distinctive charac¬ 
teristics of a “benevolent institution.” The ordinary 
use of the term is sufficiently clear, even though an 
exact definition that is also inclusive is scarcely pos¬ 
sible. The report for 1890 made no attempt at defini¬ 
tion, merely calling attention to some of the incon¬ 
sistencies in its use. The report for 1904, after stating 
that an institution was considered benevolent “if sup- 



INTRODUCTION. 


13 


ported, wholly or in part, by public taxation, private 
endowment, or subscriptions, donations, and other 
forms of gift, for the benefit of the sick, aged, and 
needy,” elaborated exceptions to such an interpreta¬ 
tion, until the criteria of admission to the list became 
more or less indefinite. 

In the preparation of the present report the same 
difficulties were met, and it was deemed best not to 
follow any rigid rule, but to rely upon the best obtain¬ 
able testimony and to exercise judgment in each indi¬ 
vidual case. 

In general, it may be stated that the benevolent 
institutions included in this report are those for the 
benefit of the sick, the needy, and the dependent, 
exclusive of those covered by the special reports on 
paupers, the insane, and the feeble-minded. The 
great majority are conducted by private persons or 
corporations both with and without financial assist¬ 
ance, whether from public authorities or private bene¬ 
faction. Some are charitable in the sense that inmates 
are cared for free of all charge; others are benevolent 
rather than charitable, in that they provide succor 
and relief for persons who are not destitute, but whose 
means or circumstances are inadequate for the full 
provision for their need. In most cases the income, 
from whatever source received, is applied to the pur¬ 
poses of the institution. 

Information furnished .—The scope of the informa¬ 
tion furnished in this report has been determined 
largely by the fact that, as in 1904, the correspond¬ 
ence method of conducting the canvass was adopted. 
It was recognized as impracticable to expect the 
officials in charge of an orphanage, asylum, or hospital 
to undertake to furnish facts not provided in their own 
records. Consequently only such questions were asked 
as would naturally be readily answered by those officers. 

The classification by sex has been extended to 
include all persons under the care of institutions, 
patients in hospitals or treated in dispensaries, nurses, 
agents, and other employees; and in the statistics for 
hospitals children under 15 years are shown separately. 
The financial reports have been elaborated to include, 
in addition to the items previously presented, the 
receipts from donations, the amount of invested funds, 
and the value of property; and inquiries have been 
made as to the date of incorporation, if incorporated, 
the admission of colored persons, the number of beds 
in hospitals, and the adoption of the cottage plan in 
the conduct of institutions for the care of children. 

Special features .—The most important new feature 
is the presentation of a new phase of activity involv¬ 
ing the enumeration of a distinct class of benevolent 
organizations. Up to 1904 the care of dependent 
children, of which a census investigation could legiti¬ 
mately take cognizance, was limited to that exercised 
in homes where they were resident inmates. The 
conception of a family home for each child as the ideal 


solution of the dependent-child problem had only 
recently become familiar, and comparatively little 
progress had been made in putting it into practice. 
The report for that year covered a number of chil¬ 
dren’s aid societies, societies for the prevention of 
cruelty to children, and similar organizations, but only 
those which conducted homes with resident inmates. 
The succeeding years, however, witnessed a remarka¬ 
ble development along these fines. There was a large 
increase in the number of societies specially organized 
for the purpose of finding homes for children; institu¬ 
tions, orphanages, and homes added this to their fist 
of activities; and juvenile courts, public officers, alms¬ 
houses, reformatories, and very nearly every kind 
of organization or institution that had dealings with 
children shared in the new impulse. In order to 
give to this development recognition in the present 
report, a special classification of “Societies for the 
protection and care of children” was made, and ques¬ 
tions as to the number placed in families were intro¬ 
duced into the schedules for institutions for the care 
of children. 

Another important feature of the report is the classi¬ 
fication of the inmates of institutions according to the 
cause for their admission. In the report for 1904 the 
institutions were described as for orphan, destitute, 
homeless, delinquent, or other children; for aged, 
infirm, disabled, wayward adults; incurables, epilep¬ 
tics, etc. In this report the institutions are described 
in the same way, but in addition the number of inmates 
of these different classes is shown, so that a clearer idea 
of the institution is furnished; and there is a partial 
basis for a study of the conditions indicated by the 
facts. For inmates of institutions for the care of 
children there is a further classification according to 
the agencies through which they enter the institution. 

STATE LEGISLATION AND SUPERVISION. 

An important factor in the development of benevo¬ 
lent institutions is the changing attitude of the state 
toward all classes of dependents, manifest in the or¬ 
ganization of systems of supervision of charitable 
institutions, and the enactment of laws governing the 
treatment of dependents, especially children and 
delinquents. Seldom does a year pass without the 
enactment by some state of elaborate statutes pro¬ 
viding for the better care of orphans and dependents, 
the establishment of juvenile courts, and the placing 
of all relief institutions under the general supervision, 
and sometimes the authority, of a state board. One 
result has been a new emphasis upon the close relation 
between the different classes of dependents. In many 
states children are no longer allowed in almshouses, 
but must be provided for in benevolent institutions; 
and juvenile delinquents, pending full trial, are cared 
for in detention homes, classed as benevolent institu¬ 
tions, and when committed by the courts are, except 



14 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 


in cases of serious crime, intrusted to benevolent insti¬ 
tutions. Furthermore, the poor officers or other au¬ 
thorities charged with looking after the poor in many 
states are specially instructed to keep in constant 
communication with private institutions, not merely 
that private relief may assist public relief, but that 
the recipients of relief may receive attention which 
the public institution could scarcely give. 

State boards of charities.—Probably the most pow¬ 
erful influence in this direction has been that exerted 
through the state boards of charities. Under various 
names and with differing status these exercise a gen¬ 
eral supervision over the entire field of charity, often 
adding to it that of correction. They are generally 
charged with the duty of immediate inspection of in¬ 
stitutions with a view to the prevention of abuses and 
the adoption of the best methods, but in the later 
and more elaborate codes they are required to make 
careful study of the entire problem of the care of the 
“ wards of the state.” Originally their duties were 
simply supervisory and the members gave their serv¬ 
ices for the public good, although necessary office or 
traveling expenses were paid. Of late it is becoming 
the custom to recognize them as an integral part of 
the state government, and the members are salaried 
and give their entire time to the work. In the latter 
case the board generally has administrative as well as 
supervisory authority and is frequently termed a board 
of control. In many cases, a supervisory board has a 
salaried secretary who acts as an executive officer. 
The following list describes the situation in each state: 


Alabama.No state board. Inspector of jails, alms¬ 

houses, cotton mills, and factories (sala¬ 
ried). 

Arizona.Board of Control, supervisory and adminis¬ 

trative (salaried). 

Arkansas.Board of Trustees for State Charitable Insti¬ 

tutions, administrative (unsalaried). 

California.State Board of Charities and Corrections, 

supervisory (unsalaried). 

Colorado.State Board of Charities and Corrections, 

supervisory only (unsalaried). 

Connecticut.State Board of Charities, supervisory (un¬ 

salaried). 

Delaware.No state board. 

District of Columbia.. .Board of Charities, supervisory (unsalaried). 

Florida.Board of Commissioners of State Institu¬ 

tions, supervisory; state executive officers 
(salaried). 

Georgia.No state board. 

Idaho.No state board. 

Illinois.Board of Administration of State Charities 

(salaried). Charities Commission, super¬ 
visory (unsalaried). 

Indiana.State Board of Charities, supervisory (un¬ 

salaried). 

Iowa.Board of Control of State Institutions, ad¬ 

ministrative and supervisory (salaried). 

Kansas.Board of Control of State Charitable Insti¬ 
tutions, administrative and supervisory 

(salaried). 

Kentucky.State Board of Control of Charitable Insti¬ 

tutions, administrative and supervisory 
(salaried). 

Louisiana.State Board of Charities and Corrections, 

supervisory (unsalaried). 

Maine.No state board. 


Maryland.Board of State Aid and Charities, supervis¬ 

ory (unsalaried). 

Massachusetts.State Board of Charity, supervisory (un¬ 

salaried). 

Michigan.Board of Corrections and Charities, super¬ 

visory (unsalaried). 

Minnesota.State Board of Control, administrative and 

supervisory (salaried). 

Mississippi.No state board. 

Missouri.State Board of Charities and Corrections, 

supervisory (unsalaried). 

Montana.State Board of Charities and Reform, super¬ 

visory (unsalaried). 

Nebraska.State Board of Charities and Corrections, 

supervisory (unsalaried). 

Nevada.No state board. 

New Hampshire.State Board of Charities and Corrections, 

supervisory (unsalaried). 

New Jersey.Commissioner of Charities and Corrections, 

supervisory (salaried). 

New Mexico.No state board. 

New York.State Board of Charities, supervisory (un¬ 

salaried). 

North Carolina.Board of Public Charities, supervisory (un¬ 

salaried). 

North Dakota.Board of Control of State Institutions, ad¬ 

ministrative and supervisory (salaried). 

Ohio.Board of State Charities, supervisory (un¬ 

salaried). Ohio Board of Administration, 
administrative (salaried). 

Oklahoma.State Commissioner of Charities and Cor¬ 

rections, supervisory (salaried). 

Oregon.No state board. 

Pennsylvania.Board of Public Charities, supervisory (un¬ 

salaried). 

Rhode Island.Board of State Charities and Corrections, 

administrative and supervisory (unsal¬ 
aried). 

South Carolina.No state board. 

South Dakota.State Board of Charities and Corrections, 

administrative and supervisory (salaried). 

Tennessee.Board of State Charities, supervisory (un¬ 

salaried). 

Texas.No state board. 

Utah.No state board. 

Vermont.No state board, except for the insane. 

Virginia.Board of Charities and Corrections, super¬ 

visory (unsalaried). 

Washington.State Board of Control, administrative and 

supervisory (salaried). 

West Virginia.State Board of Control, administrative and 

supervisory (salaried). 

Wisconsin.State Board of Control, administrative and 

supervisory (salaried). 

Wyoming.State Board of Charities and Reform, ad¬ 

ministrative and supervisory (all salaried 
executive officers of the state). 


As will be seen these boards in most cases include 
under their supervision poorhouses and general poor 
relief, hospitals for the insane, reformatories, and not 
infrequently prisons, as well as what are generally 
regarded as more properly benevolent or charitable 
institutions, and this increasingly close interrelation 
of the different branches of their work will have an 
undoubted effect upon the development of distinctly 
charitable or benevolent work. That it has already 
had an influence is certain, though it is not as yet easy 
to define, and any interpretation of the figures for 
county homes for dependents in such states as Ohio 
and Connecticut for rescue homes under the care of 
Sisters of the Good Shepherd and similar organizations 
all over the country, and for boards of guardians in 
Indiana, must take into consideration the increasing 
influence and activities of organized charity. 



















































GENERAL SUMMARIES. 


15 


GENERAL SUMMARIES OF STATISTICS OF BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 


The principal statistics of the benevolent institu¬ 
tions included in this report are summarized in Tables 

I to 16, inclusive. Tables 1 to 3 give the aggregate 
number of institutions, of inmates at the close of the 
year, and of persons received during the year; and the 
total income, expenditure, and value of property, for 
all classes of institutions; Tables 4 and 5 give a com¬ 
parative summary of such statistics in this report and 
in that for 1904, as are fairly comparable; Tables 6 to 

II show the number of institutions, of inmates at the 
close of the year, and of persons received during the 
year, in the different classes of institutions; and Tables 
12 to 16 present the total income, expenditures, and 
value of property of these classes of institutions. 

INSTITUTIONS, INMATES, AND FINANCES OF INSTI¬ 
TUTIONS. 

A general summary of the statistics included in this 
report is given in Table 3. The first column of the 
table shows the entire number of institutions given in 
the general tables. Under each succeeding head is a 
column giving the number of institutions reporting 


that particular item, which differs very materially from 
the number in the first column. This is due to the 
exclusion from these columns (1) of all institutions 
which were not in operation during 1910, or on Decem¬ 
ber 31 of that year, and which consequently furnished 
no statistics, but which, for different reasons, it was 
deemed wise to include in the general tables; and (2) 
of those institutions which for any reason made no re¬ 
port of the particular item. This latter condition 
seems to have been due in some cases to the absence 
of the necessary records, in others to the fact that the 
item was not pertinent to the institution. Thus, dis¬ 
pensaries and a number of societies for the protection 
and care of children made no report of inmates at the 
close of the year, but did report the number of persons 
received under their care during the year. In addi¬ 
tion, the financial reports of a number of institutions 
are included in those from other institutions under 
whose supervision they are operated. This is espe¬ 
cially true of dispensaries and of some branch hospitals. 

The distribution of these various items by geo¬ 
graphic divisions is illustrated by the following table: 


Table 1 


PER CENT 

OF UNITED STATES TOTAL: 1910. 

RANK IN 1910. 

DIVISION. 

Number 
of insti¬ 
tutions. 

Inmates 
at close 
of the 
year. 

Persons 

received 

during 

the 

year. 

Receipts 
during 
the year. 

Pay¬ 

ments 

during 

the 

year. 

Value of 
property 
at close 
of the 
year. 

Number 
of insti¬ 
tutions. 

Inmates 
at close 
of the 
year. 

Persons 

received 

during 

the 

year. 

Receipts 
during 
the year. 

Pay¬ 

ments 

during 

the 

year. 

Value of 
property 
at close 
of the 
year. 

United States . 

100.0 

100.0 

100.0 

100.0 

100.0 

100.0 













_ 

New England. 

12.1 

9.4 

9.1 

11.8 

11.5 

13.5 

3 

4 

3 

3 

3 

3 

Middle Atlantic. 

31.3 

35.1 

54.6 

39.0 

41.2 

49.5 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

East North Central. 

19.5 

22.0 

15.1 

22.0 

18.5 

14.3 

2 

2 

2 

2 

2 

2 

West North Central. 

10.1 

10.2 

5.4 

8.4 

8.6 

6.0 

5 

3 

5 

4 

4 

5 

South Atlantic. 

10.7 

8.3 

6.0 

6.7 

7.2 

7.9 

4 

5 

4 

5 

5 

4 

"East South Central . . _ , _ __ 

3.8 

3.2 

1.5 

2.0 

2.2 

1.8 

8 

8 

9 

9 

9 

8 

West South Central. 

3.9 

3.3 

2.4 

2.3 

2.3 

1.9 

7 

7 

7 

8 

8 

7 

Mountain. 

3.3 

2.2 

2.0 

2.5 

2.9 

1.7 

9 

9 

8 

7 

7 

9 

Pacific. 

5.4 

6.2 

3.9 

5.3 

5.6 

3.4 

6 

6 

6 

6 

6 

6 













The relation borne by the various items to the 
population in general is illustrated by Table 2, which 
gives the rate per 100,000 of population for both the 
number of inmates resident in the institutions at the 
close of the year and for the number of persons 
received into the institutions during tho year. 


Table 2 

RATE PER 100,000 OF 
population: 1910. 

DIVISION. 

Number of 
inmates 
at close of 
the year. 

Number of 
persons 
received 
during 
the year. 

United States. 

444 

5,872 





586 

7,483 


743 

15,269 


493 

4,482 


358 

2,493 


261 

2,658 


156 

934 


153 

1,482 


348 

4,085 


601 

5,052 





Further fight is shed upon the situation by the fol¬ 
lowing statement, giving tne distribution of institu¬ 
tions among the population in the different geographic 
divisions: 


United States . One for every 17,007 inhabitants. 

New England. One for every 10,019 inhabitants. 

Middle Atlantic. One for every 11,409 inhabitants. 

Pacific. One for every 14,357 inhabitants. 

Mountain. One for every 14,963 inhabitants. 

East North Central. One for every 17,299 inhabitants. 

South Atlantic. One for every 21,098 inhabitants. 

West North Central. One for every 21,275 inhabitants. 

East South Central. One for every 41,478 inhabitants. 

West South Central. One for every 41,831 inhabitants. 


The distribution among the population of the cost 
of conducting the benevolent institutions included in 
this report is indicated by the following statement 
showing by geographic divisions the amount expended 
for that purpose per capita of the general population: 


DIVISION. 

Amount. 

per 

capita. 

United States. 

$1.21 


Middle Atlantic. 

2.35 


1.95 


1.48 


1.21 


1.12 

West North Central. 

.82 


.66 


.29 


.29 






















































































16 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

GENERAL SUMMARY, BY DIVISIONS AND STATES: 1910. 


Table 3 

Aggregate 
number 
of benev- 

NUMBER OF INMATES 
IN INSTITUTIONS AT 
CLOSE OF THE 

YEAR. 1 

NUMBER OF PERSONS 
RECEIVED INTO IN¬ 
STITUTIONS DURING 
THE YEAR. 2 

RECEIPTS DURING THE 
YEAR. 

PAYMENTS DURING THE 
YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF THE YEAR. 

DIVISION OR STATE. 

olent in¬ 
stitutions 
reported. 

Number 
of insti¬ 
tutions 
reporting. 

Number 
of in¬ 
mates 
reported. 

Number 
of insti¬ 
tutions 
reporting. 

Number of 
persons 
reported. 

Number 
of insti¬ 
tutions 
reporting. 

Amount 

reported. 

Number 
of insti¬ 
tutions 
reporting. 

Amount 

reported. 

Number 
of insti¬ 
tutions 
reporting. 

Amount 
reported. 

United States. 

5,408 

4,420 

408,830 

4,815 

5,400,556 

4,281 

$118,379,859 

4,287 

$111,498,155 

3,871 

$643,878,141 

Geographic divisions: 









12,836,444 

506 

86,886,642 

New England. 

654 

565 

38,463 

588 

490,390 

558 

13,958,788 

562 

Middle Atlantic. 

1.693 

1,272 

143,528 

1,544 

2,949,467 

1,285 

46,145, 265 

1,297 

45,959,479 

1,161 

318,478,758 

East North Central. 

1,055 

912 

90,138 

929 

818,061 

902 

26,067,752 

890 

20,570,840 

798 

92,135,619 

West North Central. 

'547 

469 

41,715 

488 

290,222 

440 

9,939,318 

434 

9,601,879 

400 

38,900,536 

South Atlantic. 

578 

465 

33,964 

510 

324,250 

451 

7,970,582 

453 

8,057,684 

410 

51,115,306 

East South Central. 

203 

165 

13,191 

170 

78,556 

152 

2,354,675 

158 

2,439,602 

148 

11,497,418 

West South Central. 

210 

177 

13,463 

172 

130,205 

150 

2,720,156 

150 

2,614,625 

135 

11,927,101 

Mountain. 

176 

147 

9,152 

155 

107,604 

116 

2,942,457 

6,280,866 

119 

3,197,708 

119 

10,840,969 

Pacific. 

292 

248 

25,216 

259 

211,801 

227 

224 

6,219,894 

194 

22,095,792 

New England: 











4,082,169 

Maine. 

56 

47 

3,744 

48 

15,604 

48 

944,074 

46 

968,769 

41 

New Hampshire. 

62 

58 

2,573 

56 

8,255 

47 

516,119 

52 

511,172 

47 

3,950,775 

Vermont. 

24 

20 

830 

21 

5,737 

17 

266,887 

16 

245,785 

15 

1,470,040 

Massachusetts. 

360 

308 

20,989 

328 

362,454 

317 

8,633,048 

317 

8,058,753 

293 

62,010,787 

Rhode Island. 

56 

45 

3,666 

47 

37,940 

41 

913,684 

43 

1,004,077 

2,047,888 

33 

3,577,863 

Connecticut. 

96 

87 

6,661 

88 

60,400 

88 

2,684,976 

88 

77 

11,795,008 

Middle Atlantic: 











187,760,531 

New York. 

800 

632 

85,489 

734 

2,013,854 

648 

28,216,055 

654 

28,445,171 

585 

New Jersey. 

207 

171 

16,036 

178 

186,498 

173 

3,261,102 

173 

3,571,404 

149 

13,806,200 

Pennsylvania. 

686 

469 

42,003 

632 

749,115 

464 

14,668,108 

470 

13,942,904 

427 

116,912,027 

East North Central: 

Ohio. 

310 

271 

29,687 

277 

301,350 

284 

6,460,073 

282 

6,360,646 

252 

34,665,751 

Indiana. 

177 

147 

11,505 

138 

49,473 

141 

3,052,626 

135 

1,937,607 

117 

9,587,512 

Illinois. 

•325 

278 

26,838 

293 

273,666 

278 

12,258,819 

277 

7,956,899 

252 

30,470,428 

Michigan. 

136 

118 

11,199 

124 

129,628 

113 

2,353,269 

110 

2,255,931 

103 

9,074,523 

Wisconsin. 

107 

98 

10,909 

97 

63,944 

86 

1,942,965 

86 

2,059,757 

74 

8,337,405 

West North Central: 












Minnesota. 

128 

112 

8,639 

116 

79,568 

113 

2,756,097 

112 

2,568,929 

101 

9,045,826 

Iowa. 

103 

92 

8,209 

93 

31,355 

87 

1,567,600 

82 

1,590,994 

81 

6,260,436 

Missouri. 

159 

128 

12,018 

141 

128,180 

120 

2,985,574 

120 

2,796,036 

102 

13,905,450 

North Dakota. 

18 

14 

1,159 

14 

3,792 

11 

155,846 

10 

141,766 

10 

722,786 

South Dakota. 

17 

13 

1,420 

14 

4,808 

13 

453,554 

13 

420,159 
691,217 

13 

1,306,720 

Nebraska. 

50 

46 

3,212 

46 

21,294 

36 

630,013 

37 

38 

2,774,155 

Kansas. 

72 

64 

7,058 

64 

21,225 

60 

1,390,634 

60 

1,392,778 

55 

4,885,163 

South Atlantic: 












Delaware. 

23 

19 

769 

19 

3,576 

19 

149,415 

20 

188,987 

18 

963,713 

Maryland. 

137 

104 

8,062 

126 

129,299 

109 

2,223,367 

108 

2,280,022 

92 

15,223,085 

District of Columbia. 

72 

55 

6,481 

66 

87,901 

55 

1,830,404 

53 

1,757,550 

49 

18,480,325 

Virginia. 

98 

81 

6,359 

83 

41,616 

75 

1,378,116 

77 

1,435,991 

71 

6,727,997 

West Virginia. 

34 

29 

2,757 

31 

10,675 

27 

414,254 

27 

466,824 

27 

1,488,578 

North Carolina. 

63 

54 

3,466 

56 

13,539 

52 

698,759 

52 

669,062 

48 

2,887,192 

South Carolina. 

38 

30 

2,203 

33 

6,279 

29 

292,252 

29 

277,928 

26 

1,563,980 

Georgia. 

81 

64 

3,113 

71 

25,003 

63 

810,184 
173,831 

63 

795,783 

57 

2,885,778 

Florida. 

32 

29 

754 

25 

6,362 

22 

24 

185,537 

22 

894,658 

East South Central: 












Kentucky. 

89 

71 

5,840 

78 

36,456 

69 

999,487 

71 

1,057,994 

66 

4,844,278 

Tennessee. 

57 

47 

4,363 

48 

19,750 

45 

785,231 

47 

769,000 

43 

4,135,674 

Alabama. 

36 

30 

1,763 

28 

9,794 

23 

275,183 

24 

312,724 

22 

1,320,434 

Mississippi. 

21 

17 

1,225 

16 

12,556 

15 

294,774 

16 

299,884 

17 

1,197,032 

West South Central: 












Arkansas. 

36 

28 

1,375 

29 

12,340 

26 

484,087 

27 

425,497 

27 

1,488,700 

Louisiana. 

61 

56 

5,937 

52 

48,563 

47 

854,117 

47 

892,696 

41 

5,449,243 

Oklahoma. 

19 

17 

803 

14 

3,209 

15 

210,755 

15 

194,677 

11 

434,586 

Texas. 

94 

76 

5,348 

77 

66,093 

62 

1,171,197 

61 

1,101,755 

56 

4,554,572 

Mountain: 












Montana. 

26 

22 

957 

25 

22,994 

18 

374,361 

18 

528,221 

20 

1,733,176 

Idaho. 

11 

10 

727 

10 

2,944 

2,708 

9 

192,262 

10 

258,348 

8 

523,983 

Wyoming. 

Colorado. 

8 

7 

221 

7 

3 

35,880 

3 

34,831 

3 

75,200 

72 

63 

5,049 

65 

29,540 

50 

1,469,358 

52 

1,518,815 

49 

5,713,176 

New Mexico. 

27 

23 

1,152 

21 

4,619 

15 

345,948 

16 

346,269 

16 

899,338 

Arizona. 

17 

9 

215 

12 

37,929 

8 

219,057 

8 

207,023 

9 

462,083 

Utah. 

14 

12 

740 

14 

6,857 

12 

286,591 

11 

280,284 

13 

1,374,013 

Nevada. 

1 

1 

91 

1 

13 

1 

19,000 

1 

23,917 

1 

60,000 

Pacific: 












Washington. 

71 

63 

5,269 

66 

32,965 

51 

962,212 

50 

988,512 

43 

3,419,733 

Oregon. 

32 

30 

3,604 

29 

57,308 

26 

716,339 

27 

735,983 

26 

2,389,386 

California. 

189 

155 

16,343 

164 

121,528 

150 

4,602,315 

147 

4,495,399 

125 

16,286,673 


1 Including children under care of institutions or societies. 


1 Including patients treated in dispensaries. 

























































































































GENERAL SUMMARIES 


17 


COMPARATIVE SUMMARY: 1910 AND 1904. 

The differences in plan between the present report 
and that for 1904 make it difficult to present a fair 
comparison between the statistics for the two years. 
Day nurseries, reported in 1904, have been dropped from 
the list of institutions covered, while societies for the 
protection and care of children have been added, and 
though the resulting change in the aggregate number 


of institutions is not great, the totals for inmates and, 
to an even greater extent, for persons received during 
the year are considerably increased. The inclusion, 
under the head of inmates at the close of the year, of 
persons not resident in institutions but under their care 
or protection, and the inclusion, under the head of per¬ 
sons received during the year, of patients treated in 
dispensaries also materially affect those totals. 


COMPARATIVE SUMMARY, BY DIVISIONS AND STATES: 1910 AND 1904. 


Table 4 

DIVISION OR STATE. 

TOTAL number of 
institutions. 

NUMBER OF 

INMATES AT CLOSE OF THE 
YEAR. 1 

NUMBER OF PERSONS RECEIVED DURING 
THE YEAR. 


1910 

1904 

Increase. 

1910 

1904 

Increase. 

1910 

1904 

Increase. 

United States. 

5,408 

4,207 

1,201 

408,830 

284,362 

127,912 

5,400,556 

2,040,372 

3,360,184 

Geographic divisions: 










New England. 

654 

548 

106 

38,463 

26,469 

11,994 

490,390 

281,339 

209,051 

Middle Atlantic. 

1,693 

1,230 

463 

143,528 

98,835 

44,693 

2,949,467 

952,100 

1,997,367 

East North Central. 

1,055 

841 

214 

90,138 

66,536 

27,046 

818,061 

325,413 

492,648 

West North Central. 

547 

422 

125 

41,715 

26,410 

15,305 

290,222 

140,776 

149,446 

South Atlantic. 

578 

467 

111 

33,964 

23,404 

10,560 

324,250 

114,295 

209,955 

East South Central. 

203 

173 

30 

13,191 

9,467 

3,724 

78,556 

36,240 

42,316 

West South Central. 

210 

172 

38 

13,463 

10,095 

3,368 

130,205 

52,250 

77,955 

Mountain. 

176 

132 

44 

9,152 

5,728 

3,424 

107,604 

31,457 

76,147 

Pacific. 

292 

222 

70 

25,216 

17,418 

7,798 

211,801 

106,502 

105,299 

New England: 










Maine. 

56 

43 

13 

3,744 

4,015 

2 271 

15,604 

7,643 

7,961 

New Hampshire. 

62 

50 

12 

2,573 

1,653 

920 

8,255 

5,677 

2,578 

Vermont. 

24 

23 

1 

830 

679 

151 

5,737 

3,275 

2,462 

Massachusetts. 

360 

305 

55 

20,989 

13,958 

7,031 

362,454 

212,512 

149,942 

Rhode Island. 

56 

41 

15 

3,666 

1,873 

1,793 

37,940 

10,703 

27,237 

Connecticut. 

96 

86 

10 

6,661 

4,291 

2,370 

60,400 

41,529 

18,871 

Middle Atlantic: 










New York. 

800 

659 

141 

85,489 

60,704 

24,785 

2,013,854 

514,438 

1,499,416 

New Jersey. 

207 

162 

45 

16,036 

8,043 

7,993 

186,498 

247,393 

2 60,895 

Pennsylvania. 

686 

409 

277 

42,003 

30,088 

11,915 

749,115 

190,269 

558,846 

East North Central: 










Ohio. 

310 

267 

43 

29,687 

25,160 

4,527 

301,350 

129,133 

172,217 

Indiana. 

177 

117 

60 

11,505 

8,199 

3,306 

49,473 

17,976 

31,497 

Illinois. 

325 

257 

68 

26,838 

20,090 

10,192 

273,666 

123,242 

150,424 

Michigan. 

136 

117 

19 

11,199 

5,884 

5,315 

129,628 

30,345 

99,283 

Wisconsin. 

107 

83 

24 

10,909 

7,203 

3,706 

63,944 

24,717 

39,227 

West North Central: 










Minnesota. 

128 

86 

42 

8,639 

4,013 

4,626 

79,568 

35,710 

43,858 

Iowa. 

103 

83 

20 

8,209 

4,061 

4,148 

31,355 

22,770 

8,585 

Missouri. 

159 

140 

19 

12,018 

9,110 

2,908 

128,180 

58,201 

69,979 

North Dakota. 

18 

14 

4 

1,159 

308 

851 

3,792 

2,295 

1,497 

South Dakota. 

17 

13 

4 

1,420 

508 

912 

4,808 

2,012 

2,796 

Nebraska. 

50 

36 

14 

3,212 

1,993 

1,219 

21,294 

8,123 

13,171 

Kansas. 

72 

50 

22 

7,058 

6,417 

641 

21,225 

11,665 

9,560 

South Atlantic: 










Delaware. 

23 

16 

7 

769 

590 

179 

3,576 

1,198 

2,378 

Maryland. 

137 

117 

20 

8,062 

5,571 

2,491 

129,299 

35,889 

93,410 

District of Columbia. 

72 

57 

15 

6,481 

3,952 

2,529 

87,901 

37,953 

49,948 

Virginia. 

98 

77 

21 

6,359 

6,192 

167 

41,616 

15,498 

26,118 

West Virginia. 

34 

33 

1 

2,757 

922 

1,835 

10,675 

6,677 
4,926 

3,998 

North Carolina. 

63 

48 

15 

3,466 

2,295 

1,171 

13,539 

8,613 

South Carolina. 

38 

27 

11 

2,203 

1,206 

997 

6,279 

1,806 

4,473 

Georgia. 

81 

59 

22 

3,113 

2,231 

882 

25,003 

8,355 

16,648 

Florida. 

32 

33 

2 1 

754 

445 

309 

6,362 

1,993 

4,369 

East South Central: 

Kentucky. 

89 

82 

7 

5,840 

4,461 

1,379 

36,456 

14,991 

i 

21,465 

Tennessee. 

57 

49 

8 

4,363 

3,234 

1,129 

19,750 

13,170 

6,580 

Alabama. 

36 

25 

11 

1,763 

1,169 

594 

9,794 

5,253 

4,541 

Mississippi. 

21 

17 

4 

1,225 

603 

622 

12,556 

2,826 

9,730 

West South Central: 










Arkansas. 

36 

27 

9 

1,375 

1,086 

289 

12,340 

3,766 

8,574 

Louisiana. 

61 

56 

5 

5,937 

4,309 

1,628 

48,563 

22,005 

26,558 

Oklahoma. 

19 

13 

6 

803 

415 

388 

3,209 

1,315 

1,894 

Texas. 

94 

76 

18 

5,348 

4,285 

1,063 

66,093 

25,164 

40,929 

Mountain: 

Montana. 

26 

23 

3 

957 

1,005 

*48 

22,994 

5,586 

17,408 

Idaho. 

11 

7 

4 

727 

232 

495 

2,944 

1,557 

1,387 

Wyoming. 

8 

6 

2 

221 

114 

107 

2,708 

1,008 

1,700 

Colorado. 

72 

59 

13 

5,049 

2,843 

2,206 

29,540 

15,058 

14,482 

2,311 

New Mexico. 

27 

13 

14 

1,152 

791 

361 

4,619 

2,308 

Arizona. 

17 

11 

6 

215 

169 

46 

37,929 

2,295 

35,634 

Utah. 

14 

12 

2 

740 

518 

222 

6,857 

3,636 

3,221 


1 

1 


91 

56 

35 

13 

9 

4 

Pacific: 





3,136 

32,965 

14,152 


Washington. 

71 

47 

24 

5,269 

2,133 

18,813 

Oregon. 

32 

22 

10 

3,604 

1,086 

2,518 

57,308 

37,622 

19,686 

California. 

189 

153 

36 

16,343 

14,199 

2,144 

121,528 

54,728 

66,800 


1 Includes, for 1910, children under care of societies for care of children, and under supervision outside of institutions. 
44153°—14-2 


* Decrease. 

























































































18 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 


The financial items, as is explained on page 22, are 
so different that no attempt is made to present com¬ 
parative statistics, and Table 4, which gives figures for 
both 1910 and 1904, is therefore limited to the aggre¬ 
gate number of institutions, the number of inmates 
at the close of the year, and the number of persons 
received during the year. Detailed statistics are 
presented in connection with the different classes of 
institutions. 

Keeping the above-mentioned facts in mind, the 
following table showing by geographic divisions the in¬ 
crease under the different heads, together with the 
percentage of increase, makes it evident, in regard both 
to the institutions and the number of persons under 
their care, that there has been a marked increase, either 
in the need of the communities or in the facilities for 
meeting the need. It is certainly contrary to general 
observation that there has been any such increase in 
the need as would be indicated by an increase of 164.6 
per cent in the number of persons received into insti¬ 
tutions, so that the conclusion seems inevitable that 
the increased facilities for meeting the need are largely 
responsible for the increased number of persons re¬ 
lieved. 


Table 5 


increase: 1904-1910. 


DIVISION. 

Institutions. 

Inmates at close 
of the year. 

Persons received 
during the year. 

Num¬ 

ber. 

Per 

cent. 

Num¬ 

ber. 

Per 

cent. 

Number. 

Per 

cent. 

United States. 

1,201 

28.5 

124,468 

43.8 

3,360,184 

164.6 

Middle Atlantic. 

463 

37.6 

44,693 

45.2 

1,997,367 

209.8 

East North Central. 

214 

25.4 

23,602 

35.5 

492,648 

151.4 

West North Central. 

125 

29.6 

15,305 

57.9 

149,446 

106.2 

South Atlantic. 

111 

23.8 

10,560 

45.1 

209,955 

183.7 

New England. 

106 

19.3 

11,994 

45.3 

209,051 

74.3 

Pacific. 

70 

31.5 

7,798 

44.7 

105,299 

98.9 

Mountain. 

44 

33.3 

3,424 

59.1 

76,147 

242.1 

West South Central. 

38 

22.1 

3,368 

33.3 

77,955 

149.1 

East South Central. 

30 

17.3 

3,724 

39.4 

42,316 

116.8 


DISTRIBUTION OF INSTITUTIONS, INMATES, AND 
PERSONS RECEIVED, BY CLASS OF INSTITUTION. 

The entire number of institutions of all classes, in¬ 
cluding those which for any reason did not furnish 
statistics, but combining hospitals and dispensaries 
under the head of institutions for the care of the sick 
is given in Table 9, while, for purposes of comparison, 
the following table shows the number of institutions 
in each class and the per cent which this number 
represents of the total: 


Table 6 

CLASS OF INSTITUTION. 

BENEVOLENT INSTI¬ 
TUTIONS.* 1910. 

Number. 

Per cent 
of total. 

All classes. 

5,408 

100.0 

Institutions for the sick. 

2,492 

46.1 

Institutions for the care of children. 

1,435 

26.5 

Homes for adults, or adults and children. 

1,151 

21.3 

Societies for protection and care of children. 

205 

3.8 

Institutions for blind and deaf. 

125 

2.3 


Table 10, which gives a summary, by classes of 
institutions, of the number of inmates at the close of 
the year, covers only those actually resident in insti¬ 
tutions at the close of the year, and excludes those 
outside of institutions, though under their care or 
supervision, and patients treated in dispensaries. 

The following table gives the number of inmates 
in the different classes of institutions, together with 
the per cent distribution of the total number: 


Table 7 

CLASS OF INSTITUTIONS. 

INMATES IN 
BENEVOLENT 
INSTITUTIONS AT CLOSE 

OF THE year: 1910. 


Number. 

Per cent 
of total. 

All classes. 

336,127 

100.0 


Homes for adults, or adults and children. 

116,228 
108,070 
96 390 

34.6 

Institutions for the care of children. 

32.1 

Institutions for the sick. 

28.7 

Institutions for blind and deaf. 

15. 439 

4.6 



Table 11 gives the number of persons received into 
the various classes of institutions during the year as 
resident inmates, excluding patients treated in dis¬ 
pensaries and those taken under their care by societies 
for the protection and care of children, or by homes 
for children. The following table gives the num¬ 
ber of inmates received in each class of institutions, 
together with the per cent distribution of the total 
number received: 


Table 8 

CLASS OF INSTITUTIONS. 

PERSONS RECEIVED IN 
BENEVOLENT INSTI¬ 
TUTIONS DURING THE 

year: 1910. 

Number. 

Per cent 
of total. 

All classes. 

2,960,538 

100.0 

Institutions for the sick. 

1,953,309 
918,752 
85,829 
2,648 

66.0 

31.0 

2.9 

0.1 

Homes for adults, or adults and children. 

Institutions for the care of children. 

Institutions for blind and deaf. 



In connection with these tables it should be 
borne in mind that, as will be explained more fully in 
the text accompanying the descriptive tables on hos¬ 
pitals, page 46, the number both of inmates of hospi¬ 
tals and of persons received into them includes a 
large number of persons who can not fairly, except 
perhaps in an indirect way, be considered as recipients 
of benevolence, being pay inmates who meet all regu¬ 
lar charges for treatment and who do not consider 
themselves as under any special obligations to the 
hospital authorities. In a somewhat similar man¬ 
ner the inmates of institutions for the blind and deaf 
are, for the most part, regarded in the same light 
as pupils in educational institutions which are sup¬ 
ported by the state. Keeping these conditions in 
mind it is noticeable that while the hospitals and 
dispensaries far outnumber the other classes, forming 
46.1 per cent of all the institutions reported, and also 
report a considerable majority of the number of per¬ 
sons received during the year (66.0 per cent of the 



















































































GENERAL SUMMARIES 


19 


total), in respect to number of inmates at the close of 
the year they have a much lower standing, reporting 
only 28.7 per cent of the total. 

As will be seen from the descriptive text in connec¬ 
tion with the summary for homes for adults or 
adults and children, page 38, a considerable number 
of adults included in those tables can scarcely be 
regarded as recipients of benevolent relief or assistance 
in the usual sense of the term, while the children 
included in that class may all legitimately be so 
regarded. It appears, therefore, that notwithstanding 


the comparatively small number of children received 
into homes for the care of children, it is practically 
certain that children occupy first place, numerically, 
among the classes of persons receiving benevolent 
care. A full presentation of the situation in regard to 
children is given on page 26. 

It should be said that the small number of children 
received into institutions, as compared with the 
number of adults received, is due to the large and 
rapid movement of population in hospitals and in 
homes for the temporary care of adults. 


NUMBER OF INSTITUTIONS, BY CLASSES, FOR DIVISIONS AND STATES: 1910. 


Table 9 


DIVISION OR STATE. 


United States.... 

Geographic divisions: 

New England. 

Middle Atlantic. 

East North Central... 
West North Central.. 

South Atlantic. 

East South Central... 
West South Central.. 

Mountain. 

Pacific. 

New England: 

Maine. 

New Hampshire. 

Vermont. 

Massachusetts. 

Rhode Island. 

Connecticut. 

Middle Atlantic: 

New York. 

New Jersey. 

Pennsylvania. 

East North Central: 

Ohio. 

Indiana. 

Illinois. 

Michigan. 

Wisconsin. 

West North Central: 

Minnesota. 

Iowa. 

Missouri. 

North Dakota. 

South Dakota. 

Nebraska. 

Kansas. 


Total 
num¬ 
ber of 
insti¬ 
tu¬ 
tions. 

Insti¬ 

tu¬ 

tions 

for 

care 

of 

chil¬ 

dren. 

Soci¬ 

eties 

for 

pro¬ 

tec¬ 

tion 

and 

care 

of 

chil¬ 

dren. 

Homes 

for 

adults, 

or 

adults 

and 

chil¬ 

dren. 

5,408 

1,151 

205 

1,435 

654 

118 

18 

228 

1,693 

309 

65 

445 

1,055 

260 

63 

266 

547 

95 

20 

126 

578 

152 

10 

154 

203 

55 

6 

61 

210 

58 

9 

55 

176 

28 

5 

21 

292 

76 

9 

79 

56 

12 

2 

19 

62 

17 

3 

16 

24 

4 


9 

360 

49 

10 

130 

56 

13 

1 

19 

96 

23 

2 

35 

800 

154 

28 

221 

207 

50 

12 

59 

686 

105 

25 

165 

310 

106 

16 

83 

177 

47 

33 

40 

325 

64 

5 

88 

136 

24 

3 

31 

107 

19 

6 

24 

128 

16 

7 

29 

103 

18 

2 

27 

159 

32 

5 

37 

18 

2 

1 

2 

17 

2 

1 

2 

50 

9 

1 

14 

72 

16 

3 

15 


INSTITUTIONS FOR 
CARE OF THE SICK. 

Insti¬ 

tu¬ 

tions 

for 

blind 

and 

deaf. 

Total. 

Hospi¬ 

tals 

and 

sani¬ 

tari¬ 

ums. 

Dis- 

pen- 

sa- 

ries. 

2,492 

1,918 

574 

125 

277 

232 

45 

13 

842 

500 

342 

32 

444 

380 

64 

22 

290 

256 

34 

16 

248 

193 

55 

14 

71 

62 

9 

10 

79 

70 

9 

9 

117 

111 

6 

5 

124 

114 

10 

4 

22 

21 

1 

1 

26 

26 



11 

11 



163 

129 

34 

8 

22 

17 

5 

1 

33 

28 

5 

3 

379 

253 

126 

18 

83 

63 

20 

3 

380 

184 

196 

11 

100 

81 

19 

5 

55 

51 

4 

2 

162 

132 

30 

6 

74 

66 

8 

4 

53 

50 

3 

5 

74 

69 

5 

2 

54 

52 

2 

2 

81 

57 

24 

4 

11 

11 


2 

10 

9 

1 

2 

24 

23 

1 

2 

36 

35 

1 

2 


division or state. 


Total 
num¬ 
ber of 
insti¬ 
tu¬ 


tions. 


South Atlantic: 

Delaware. 

Maryland. 

District of Columbia.. 

Virginia. 

AVest Virginia. 

North Carolina. 

South Carolina. 

Georgia. 

• Florida. 

East South Central: 

Kentucky. 

Tennessee. 

Alabama. 

Mississippi. 

West South Central: 

Arkansas. 

Louisiana. 

Oklahoma. 

Texas. 

Mountain: 

Montana. 

Idaho. 

AVvoming. 

Colorado. 

New Mexico. 

Arizona. 

Utah. 

Nevada. 

Pacific: 

Washington. 

Oregon. 

California. 


23 

137 

72 

98 

34 

63 

38 

81 

32 

89 

57 

36 

21 

36 

61 

19 

94 

26 

11 

8 

72 

27 

17 

14 

1 

71 

32 

189 


Insti¬ 

tu¬ 

tions 

for 

care 

of 

chil¬ 

dren. 

Soci¬ 

eties 

for 

pro¬ 

tec¬ 

tion 

and 

care 

of 

chil¬ 

dren. 

Homes 

for 

adults, 

or 

adults 

and 

chil¬ 

dren. 

INSTITUTIONS 
CARE OF THE 

FOR 

SICK. 

Insti¬ 

tu¬ 

tions 

for 

blind 

and 

deaf. 

Total. 

Hospi¬ 

tals 

and 

sani¬ 

tari¬ 

ums. 

Dis- 

pen- 

sa- 

ries. 

5 

1 

9 

8 

5 

3 


36 

2 

31 

63 

43 

20 

5 

14 

1 

26 

29 

16 

13 

2 

32 

2 

27 

36 

29 

7 

1 

9 

1 

5 

18 

16 

2 

1 

17 

1 

10 

34 

31 

3 

1 

10 

1 

14 

12 

9 

3 

1 

22 


26 

31 

27 

4 

2 

7 

1 

6 

17 

17 


1 

25 

2 

31 

29 

25 

4 

2 

15 

2 

17 

20 

16 

4 

3 

8 

2 

11 

12 

11 

1 

3 

7 


2 

10 

10 


2 

9 

1 

8 

16 

15 

1 

2 

24 


19 

16 

12 

4 

2 

5 

2 

4 

6 

6 


2 

20 

6 

24 

41 

37 

4 

3 

3 

1 

4 

17 

16 

1 

1 

2 

1 

1 

6 

6 


1 

1 


1 

6 

6 



14 

2 

9 

46 

45 

1 

1 

2 

1 

1 

22 

19 

3 

1 

2 


2 

13 

12 

1 


3 


3 

7 

7 


1 

i 







14 

1 

19 

37 

36 

1 


6 

1 

11 

13 

12 

1 

1 

56 

7 

49 

74 

66 

8 

3 









































































































































20 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

NUMBER OF INMATES PRESENT IN INSTITUTIONS AT CLOSE OF THE YEAR, BY CLASS OF INSTITUTION, FOR 

DIVISIONS AND STATES: 1910. 


Table lO 

DIVISION OR STATE. 

Total 
number of 
inmates. 

INSTITUTIONS FOR 
CARE OF CHILDREN. 

1 homes for adults, 
OR ADULTS and 
children. 

HOSPITALS AND 
SANITARIUMS. 

INSTITUTIONS FOR 
BLIND AND DEAF. 

Number 
of insti¬ 
tutions 
report¬ 
ing. 

Number of 
inmates. 

Number 
of insti¬ 
tutions 
report¬ 
ing. 

Number of 
inmates. 

Number 
of insti¬ 
tutions 
report¬ 
ing. 

Number of 
inmates. 

Number 
of insti¬ 
tutions 
report¬ 
ing. 

Number of 
inmates. 

United States. 

336,127 

1,077 

108,070 

1,358 

116,228 

1,716 

96,390 

121 

15,439 

Geographic divisions: 










New England. 

31,143 

110 

9,023 

219 

10,357 

209 

10,643 

13 

1,120 

Middle Atlantic. 

121,061 

291 

44,963 

429 

35,362 

469 

36,789 

32 

3,947 

East North Central. 

71,530 

248 

20,153 

254 

30,538 

347 

17,797 

21 

3,042 

West North Central. 

31,766 

93 

7,721 

121 

12,092 

223 

9,908 

16 

2,045 

South Atlantic. 

27,609 

139 

10,107 

139 

9,553 

165 

6,311 

13 

1,638 

East South Central. 

11,496 

50 

2,979 

53 

5,061 

51 

2,206 

8 

1,250 

West South Central. 

12,788 

53 

4,136 

51 

3,781 

59 

3,265 

9 

1,606 

Mountain. 

8,270 

24 

2,166 

17 

1,514 

■ 98 

4,112 

5 

478 

Pacific. 

20,464 

69 

6,822 

75 

7,970 

95 

5,359 

4 

313 

New England: 










Maine. 

3,495 

11 

853 

16 

1,947 

18 

584 

1 

111 

New Hampshire. 

1,915 

17 

1,125 

16 

371 

23 

419 



Vermont. T. 

'827 

2 

113 

8 

432 

10 

282 



Massachusetts. 

16,573 

48 

4,069 

127 

5,070 

116 

6,770 

8 

664 

Rhode Island. 

2,684 

11 

913 

17 

788 

15 

909 

1 

74 

Connecticut. 

5,649 

21 

1,950 

35 

1,749 

27 

1,679 

3 

271 

Middle Atlantic: 










New York. 

77,194 

144 

30,247 

212 

21,692 

241 

22,998 

18 

2,257 

New Jersey. 

10,829 

45 

3,365 

58 

3,806 

54 

3,381 

3 

277 

Pennsylvania. 

33,038 

102 

11,351 

159 

9,864 

174 

10,410 

11 

1,413 

East North Central: 










Ohio. 

25,472 

100 

8,479 

80 

9,669 

74 

6,550 

5 

774 

Indiana. 

8,609 

44 

2,600 

37 

4,097 

47 

1,440 

2 

472 

Illinois. 

22,285 

63 

5,603 

83 

9,916 

122 

5,946 

5 

820 

Michigan. 

7,257 

23 

1,868 

30 

2,725 

58 

2,114 

4 

550 

Wisconsin. 

7,907 

18 

1,603 

24 

4,131 

46 

1,747 

5 

426 

West North Central: 










Minnesota. 

6,919 

16 

1,569 

28 

2,142 

62 

2,839 

2 

369 

Iowa. 

5,673 

18 

1,667 

26 

1,761 

44 

1,884 

2 

361 

Missouri. 

9,595 

31 

2,865 

36 

2,978 

53 

3,224 

4 

528 

North Dakota. 

459 

2 

121 

2 

148 

7 

87 

2 

103 

South Dakota. 

851 

2 

78 

2 

548 

6 

112 

2 

113 

Nebraska. 

2,729 

9 

646 

13 

945 

21 

891 

2 

247 

Kansas. 

5,540 

15 

775 

14 

3,570 

30 

871 

2 

324 

South Atlantic: 










Delaware. 

687 

5 

309 

9 

241 

5 

137 



Maryland. 

6,829 

33 

2,493 

28 

1,831 

37 

2,207 

4 

298 

District of Columbia. 

4,702 

14 

1,063 

23 

2,528 

15 

977 

2 

134 

Virginia. 

5,516 

27 

1,243 

25 

3,181 

26 

1,018 

1 

74 

West Virginia. 

1,318 

8 

407 

4 

246 

15 

473 

1 

192 

North Carolina. 

3,041 

16 

1,698 

10 

426 

26 

550 

1 

367 

South Carolina. 

1,869 

10 

1,270 

13 

255 

5 

141 

1 

203 

Georgia. 

3,008 

20 

1,431 

22 

708 

20 

602 

2 

267 

Florida. 

639 

6 

193 

5 

137 

16 

206 

1 

103 

East South Central: 










Kentucky. 

4,479 

21 

930 

26 

2,165 

22 

923 

2 

461 

Tennessee. 

4,122 

14 

813 

16 

2,326 

13 

500 

3 

483 

Alabama. 

1,670 

8 

603 

10 

390 

7 

371 

3 

306 

Mississippi. 

1,225 

7 

633 

1 

180 

9 

412 



West South Central: 










Arkansas. 

1,366 

7 

243 

7 

371 

11 

371 

2 

381 

Louisiana. 

5,364 

24 

2,534 

18 

1,279 

12 

1,372 

2 

179 

Oklahoma. 

777 

4 

95 

4 

305 

5 

94 

2 

283 

Texas. 

5,281 

18 

1,264 

22 

1,826 

31 

1,428 

3 

763 

Mountain: 










Montana. 

954 

2 

224 

4 

207 

14 

440 

1 

83 

Idaho. 

437 

2 

57 

1 

177 

5 

153 

1 

50 

Wyoming. 

221 

1 

13 

1 

53 

5 

155 



Colorado!. 

4,638 

12 

1,329 

9 

948 

41 

2,171 

1 

190 

New Mexico. 

974 

2 

148 



19 

792 

1 

34 

Arizona. 

215 

1 

41 



8 

174 



Utah. 

740 

3 

263 

2 

129 

6 

227 

1 

121 

Nevada. 

91 

1 

91 







Pacific: 










Washington. 

3,454 

10 

639 

19 

1,445 

33 

1,370 



Oregon T. 

2,266 

6 

563 

10 

704 

12 

973 

1 

28 

California. 

14,744 

53 

5,620 

46 

5,821 

50 

3,016 

3 

287 










































































































GENERAL SUMMARIES. 21 

NUMBER OF PERSONS RECEIVED INTO INSTITUTIONS DURING THE YEAR, BY CLASS OF INSTITUTION, FOR 

DIVISIONS AND STATES: 1910. 


Table 11 

DIVISION OR STATE. 

Total num¬ 
ber of persons 
received. 

INSTITUTIONS FOR 
CARE OF CHILDREN. 

HOMES FOR ADULTS , OR 
ADULTS AND CHILDREN. 

HOSPITALS AND 
SANITARIUMS. 

INSTITUTIONS FOR 
BLIND AND DEAF. 

Number 
of institu¬ 
tions re¬ 
porting. 

Number of 
persons 
received. 

Number 
of institu¬ 
tions re¬ 
porting. 

Number of 
persons 
received. 

Number 
of institu¬ 
tions re¬ 
porting. 

Number of 
persons 
received. 

Number 
of institu¬ 
tions re¬ 
porting. 

Number 
of persons 
received. 

United States. 

2,960,538 

1,065 

85,829 

1,302 

918,752 

1,829 

1,953,309 

Ill 

2,648 

Geographic divisions: 










New England. 

314,742 

112 

8,066 

198 

82,049 

226 

224,432 

13 

195 

Middle Atlantic. 

1,239,399 

287 

35,873 

420 

514,466 

491 

688;346 

28 

714 

East North Central. 

622,246 

246 

18,712 

244 

208,430 

368 

394,687 

17 

417 

West North Central. 

212,615 

90 

7,581 

116 

23,834 

239 

180,891 

16 

309 

South Atlantic. 

185,081 

138 

3,883 

132 

23,125 

183 

157', 652 

12 

421 

East South Central. 

56,477 

47 

1,456 

53 

7,035 

55 

47;779 

8 

207 

West South Central. 

79,297 

49 

2,360 

50 

2,565 

59 

74,141 

8 

231 

Mountain. 

67,791 

27 

2,589 

18 

1,773 

101 

63,343 

5 

86 

Pacific. 

182,890 

69 

5,309 

71 

55,475 

107 

122,038 

4 

68 

New England: 










Maine. 

14,392 

12 

208 

13 

1,170 

21 

12,994 

1 

20 

New Hampshire. 

8,255 

17 

625 

14 

91 

25 

7,539 



Vermont. 

5'737 

2 

58 

8 

126 

11 

5' 553 



Massachusetts. 

215,383 

48 

5,632 

118 

55,851 

125 

153,778 

8 

122 

Rhode Island. 

19,363 

11 

724 

15 

902 

16 

17,724 

1 

13 

Connecticut. 

51,612 

22 

819 

30 

33,909 

28 

26,844 

3 

40 

Middle Atlantic: 










New York. 

771,175 

143 

26,465 

213 

347,207 

250 

397,078 

14 

425 

New Jersey. 

128,836 

43 

5,131 

56 

55,121 

60 

68,531 

3 

53 

Pennsylvania. 

339,388 

101 

4,277 

151 

112,138 

181 

222,737 

11 

236 

East North Central: 










Ohio. 

245,111 

102 

6,995 

77 

150,696 

78 

87,350 

3 

70 

Indiana. 

37,777 

45 

1,277 

38 

10,904 

49 

25,506 

2 

90 

Illinois. 

158,511 

58 

7,348 

79 

24,872 

128 

. 126,198 

4 

93 

Michigan. 

122,393 

24 

1,951 

28 

2,041 

63 

118,333 

3 

68 

Wisconsin. 

58,454 

17 

1,141 

22 

19,917 

50 

37,300 

5 

96 

West North Central: 










Minnesota. 

60,747 

16 

1,194 

29 

8,386 

65 

51,122 

2 

45 

Iowa. 

29,329 

17 

1,182 

24 

892 

49 

27,209 

2 

46 

Missouri. 

77,706 

29 

3,677 

33 

10,675 

55 

63,248 

4 

106 

North Dakota. 

3,792 

1 

65 

2 

144 

9 

3,564 

2 

19 

South Dakota. 

4,808 

2 

106 

2 

568 

8 

4,116 

2 

18 

Nebraska. 

15,514 

9 

642 

12 

482 

22 

14,361 

2 

29 

Kansas. 

20,719 

16 

715 

14 

2,687 

31 

17,271 

2 

46 

South Atlantic: 










Delaware. 

2,195 

5 

92 

7 

122 

5 

1,981 



Maryland. 

47,569 

35 

1,310 

30 

4,978 

43 

41,238 

4 

43 

District of Columbia. 

58,350 

14 

503 

22 

8,763 

16 

49,057 

1 

27 

Virginia. 

24,818 

27 

309 

23 

6,363 

26 

18,121 

1 

25 

West Virginia.. 

10,023 

8 

349 

4 

245 

16 

9,406 

1 

23 

North Carolina. 

11,006 

14 

388 

9 

303 

29 

10,251 

1 

64 

South Carolina. 

5,000 

10 

232 

12 

303 

8 

4,436 

1 

29 

Georgia. 

19,758 

21 

604 

21 

2,003 

24 

16,950 

2 

201 

Florida. 

6,362 

4 

96 

4 

45 

16 

6,212 

1 

9 

East South Central: 










Kentucky. 

20,813 

20 

526 

27 

4,943 

25 

15,283 

2 

61 

Tennessee. 

15,614 

13 

595 

15 

1,374 

15 

13,567 

3 

78 

Alabama. 

7,494 

8 

198 

9 

617 

7 

6,611 

3 

68 

Mississippi. 

12,556 

6 

137 

2 

101 

8 

12,318 



West South Central: 








Arkansas. 

11,751 

6 

179 

7 

298 

13 

11,221 

2 

53 

Louisiana. 

23,595 

21 

1,352 

17 

948 

11 

21,275 

1 

20 

Oklahoma. 

3,209 

4 

102 

4 

188 

4 

2,878 

2 

41 

Texas. 

40,742 

18 

727 

22 

1,131 

31 

38,767 

3 

117 

Mountain: 










Montana. 

21,058 

3 

207 

4 

173 

16 

20,669 

1 

9 

Idaho. 

2,944 

2 

249 

1 

43 

6 

2,645 

1 

7 

W voming. 

2,708 

1 

13 

1 

12 

5 

2,683 



Colorado”. 

28,340 

13 

1,724 

9 

1,441 

41 

25,145 

1 

30 

New Mexico. 

3,719 

2 

74 



17 

3,627 

1 

18 

Arizona. 

2,152 

2 

83 



9 

2,069 



Utah. 

6,857 

3 

226 

3 

104 

7 

6,505 

1 

22 

Nevada. 

13 

1 

13 







Pacific: 










W ashington. 

32,325 

11 

1,069 

19 

1,365 

35 

29,891 



Oregon. 

55,341 

5 

414 

10 

41,107 

12 

13;814 

1 

6 

California. 

95,224 

53 

3,826 

42 

13,003 

60 

78,333 

3 

62 















































































































22 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 


DISTRIBUTION OF FINANCES OF INSTITUTIONS, BY 
CLASS OF INSTITUTION. 

The schedules sent out to the institutions called 
for financial information as follows: (1) Receipts from 
state, county, or municipal appropriations, from 
invested funds, from donations, from care of inmates, 
and from other sources; (2) expenditures for general 
running expenses, and for permanent improvements; 
and (3) value of property at close of year, including 
land, buildings and apparatus, and invested funds. 

Information furnished .—-From the returns it became 
clear that it would be impossible to obtain the desired 
information, at least in detail. Some institutions 
evidently did not keep the necessary financial records, 
others objected to making public their private finances. 
This latter difficulty was overcome in some instances 
by including the figures in the summary tables where 
the identity of the institution was. not disclosed and 
not presenting them in the detailed general tables. 
It became apparent also that limitations of space for 
the tables necessitated some consolidation. 

Tables 14, 15, and 16, on pages 23, 24, and 25, show, 
by geographic divisions and states, the income, expendi¬ 
tures, and value of property reported by the different 
classes of institutions, together with the number of 
institutions making a report as to each item. In each 
case the figures cover all the varied sources of income, 
the different forms of expenditure, and the different 
classes of property. 

The following table shows the distribution of the 
three main financial items among the different classes 
of institutions: 


Table 12 

receipts: 

1910. 

payments: 

1910. 

VALUE OF 

property: 1910. 

CLASS OF INSTITUTION. 

Amount. 

Per 

cent 

of 

total. 

Amount. 

Per 

cent 

of 

total. 

Amount. 

Per 

cent 

of 

total. 

All classes. 

$118,379, 859 

100.0 

$111,498,155 

100.0 

$643,878,141 

100.0 

Hospitals. 

66,213,435 

55.9 

61,330,047 

55.0 

306,021,539 

47.5 

Homes for adults, or 




adults and children... 

24,203,197 

20.4 

23,720,381 

21.3 

158,318,121 

24.6 

Institutions for the care 




of children. 

19,140,342 

16.2 

17,381,486 

15.6 

133,931,551 

20.8 

Institutions for blind 





and deaf. 

5,650,380 

4.8 

5,464,020 

4.9 

33,159,771 

5.2 

Societies for protection 




and care of children... 

2,102,892 

1.8 

2,009,081 

1.8 

6,727,107 

1.0 

Dispensaries. 

1,069,613 

0.9 

1,593,140 

1.4 

5,720,052 

0.9 


In similar manner, Table 13 gives the average 
income, expenditures, and value of property for the 
different classes. 

Significance of figures reported .—The full significance 
of these figures, of course, depends upon the relative 
importance of the different classes of income, expendi¬ 
ture, and property, the amount received from pay in¬ 
mates, from public (federal, state, etc.) appropriations, 
from invested funds, etc., respectively. This is shown 


in subsequent tables, pages 73 to 78, and it is sufficient 
here to call attention to a few items of special signifi¬ 
cance. The relatively high rank of institutions for 
the biind and deaf in the financial items, as compared 
with their rank in number of institutions and of in¬ 
mates, is due chiefly to the fact that the great majority 
of them are state institutions, their expenditures being 
on a scale commensurate with this fact. Hospitals 
share in the same source of income, although their 
principal source is the amount received from pay in¬ 
mates. Their property also includes a large amount 
of invested funds or endowments. Among the homes 
for adults and children are the large soldiers’ homes 
conducted by the federal and state governments, which 
raise the totals and averages for this class of institu¬ 
tions. On the other hand, as already stated, a consid¬ 
erable number of dispensaries own no property apart 
from the hospitals under whose auspices they are con¬ 
ducted, and frequently their income and expenditures 
are covered by the hospital statements. A similar 
situation exists hi regard to societies for the protection 
and care of children. 


Table 13 

CLASS OF INSTITUTION. 

AVERAGE PER INSTITUTION 

reporting: 1910. 

Receipts. 

Pay¬ 

ments. 

Value of 
property. 

All classes. 

$27,652 

$26,008 

$166,333 

Institutions for the care of children. 

Societies for the protection and care of children . 

Homes for adults, or adults and children. 

Hospitals. 

19,064 
12,744 
18,830 
43,446 
5,942 
50,904 

17,278 
12,326 
18,107 
40,697 
8,341 
49,673 

127,882 
83,051 
146,855 
216,270 
48,068 
312,828 

Dispensaries. 

Institutions for blind and deaf. 


The items that enter into these financial statistics 
are of wider scope than those included in the report 
for 1904, so that comparison between the two reports 
is difficult. In 1904 the items called for were “ Annual 
subsidy from public funds,” “Receipts from pay in¬ 
mates,” and “Cost of maintenance.” As will be set 
forth in fuller detail in connection with Tables 64-69, 
pages 73-78, these do not appear to correspond with 
the items covered by the present report. It was in¬ 
tended to cover the item “Cost of maintenance” by 
the question calling for expenditures for general run¬ 
ning expenses. As a matter of fact, the average “Cost 
of maintenance” in 1904 was $13,211, while the aver¬ 
age total expenditures in 1910, as above, were $26,008, 
and the average running expenses were $22,220. An 
average increase of $9,011 per institution in six years 
seems so unlikely as to render inevitable the con¬ 
clusion that the elements entering into the two reports 
were so different as to make comparison impossible. 
The situation is similar in regard to the receipts from 
public funds and from pay inmates. 










































GENERAL SUMMARIES. 23 

RECEIPTS OF INSTITUTIONS DURING THE YEAR, BY CLASS OF INSTITUTION, FOR DIVISIONS AND STATES: 1910. 


Table 14 

DIVISION OR STATE. 

Total 

income 

reported. 

INSTITUTIONS FOR 
CARE OF CHILDREN. 

SOCIETIES 

FOR PROTECTION 
AND CARE OF 
CHILDREN. 

HOMES FOR 
ADULTS, OR ADULTS 
AND CHILDREN. 

HOSPITALS AND 
SANITARIUMS. 

DISPENSARIES. 

INSTITUTIONS FOR 
BLIND AND DEAF. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
institu¬ 
tions 
report¬ 
ing. 

Receipts 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
socie¬ 
ties 
report¬ 
ing. 

Receipts 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
institu¬ 
tions 
report¬ 
ing. 

Receipts 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
institu¬ 
tions 
report¬ 
ing. 

Receipts 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
institu¬ 
tions 
report¬ 
ing. 

Receipts 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
institu¬ 
tions 
report¬ 
ing. 

Receipts 

reported. 

United States. 

$118,379,859 

1,004 

$19,140,342 

165 

$2,102,892 

1,297 

$24,203,197 

1,524 

$66,213,435 

180 

$1,069,613 

Ill 

$5,650,380 

Geographic divisions: 














New England. 

13,958,788 

102 

1,324,260 

16 

308,549 

207 

3,043,209 

195 

8,642,451 

25 

103,107 

13 

537,212 

Middle Atlantic. 

46,145,265 

274 

10,213,100 

49 

974,734 

416 

8,090,785 

444 

24,725,505 

72 

408,171 

30 

1,732,970 

East North Central. 

26,067,752 

235 

3,193,354 

45 

252,015 

247 

5,269,006 

322 

15,890,287 

34 

307,908 

19 

1,155,182 

West North Central.... 

9,939,318 

82 

977,349 

20 

178,599 

113 

2,289,926 

194 

5,667,254 

15 

133,479 

16 

692,711 

South Atlantic. 

7,970,582 

132 

1,282,124 

10 

138,193 

, 133 

2,156,093 

145 

3,946,431 

21 

56,927 

10 

390,814 

East South Central. 

2,354,675 

45 

441,856 

4 

9,564 1 

50 

776,651 

42 

794,627 

4 

10,893 

7 

321,084 

West South Central. 

2,720,156 

45 

429,812 

8 

19,128 

45 

587,506 

41 

1,205,427 

3 

16,462 

8 

461,821 

Mountain. 

2,942,457 

24 

312,207 

5 

85,751 

17 

406,075 

64 

1,903,875 

1 

200 

5 

234,349 

Pacific. 

6,280,866 

65 

966,280 

8 

136,359 

69 

1,583,946 

77 

3,437,578 

5 

32,466 

3 

124,237 

New England: 














Maine. 

944,074 

11 

83,211 

2 

4,465 

17 

450,761 

16 

381,037 

1 

SOO 

1 

23,800 

New Hampshire. 

516,119 

12 

99,936 

1 

1,421 

13 

119,838 

21 

294,924 





Vermont..'.. 

266; 887 

2 

18; 673 



5 

52', 629 

10 

195,585 





Massachusetts. 

8,633,048 

47 

650; 220 

10 

240,313 

122 

1,735,989 

111 

5,530,390 

19 

90,576 

8 

385,560 

Rhode Island. 

913,684 

10 

119,024 

1 

17,149 

16 

206,750 

12 

538,580 

1 

1,181 

1 

31,000 

Connecticut. 

2,684,976 

20 

353,196 

2 

45,201 

34 

477,242 

25 

1,701,935 

4 

10,550 

3 

96.852 

Middle Atlantic: 














New York. 

28,216,055 

135 

5,691,435 

23 

635,592 

206 

5,417,330 

216 

15,039,231 

51 

313,124 

17 

1,119,343 

New Jersey. 

3,261,102 

41 

444,816 

10 

101,517 

57 

813,250 

56 

1,836,565 

7 

17,238 

2 

47,716 

Pennsylvania. 

14,668,108 

9S 

4,076,849 

16 

237,625 

153 

1,860,205 

172 

7,849,709 

14 

77,809 

11 

565,911 

East North Central: 














Ohio. 

6,460,073 

98 

1,398,896 

14 

45,088 

80 

1,559,283 

76 

3,083,295 

11 

109,395 

5 

264,116 

Indiana. 

3,052,626 

41 

382,154 

17 

39,458 

35 

673,678 

43 

1,777,203 

3 

29,019 

2 

151,114 

Illinois. 

12,258,819 

61 

972,764 

5 

99,969 

79 

1,886,562 

113 

8,752,227 

15 

156,167 

5 

391,130 

Michigan. 

2,353,269 

19 

176,170 

3 

33,293 

30 

445,706 

54 

1,474,397 

3 

4,881 

4 

218,822 

Wisconsin. 

1,942,965 

16 

263,370 

6 

34,207 

23 

703,777 

36 

803,165 

2 

8,446 

3 

130,000 

West North Central: 














Minnesota. 

2,756,097 

15 

242,230 

7 

36,461 

27 

326,162 

59 

1,985,310 

3 

11,790 

2 

154,144 

Iowa. 

1,567,600 

16 

257,113 

2 

47,733 

24 

301,333 

42 

846,526 

1 

16,750 

2 

08,145 

Missouri. 

2,985,574 

26 

300,440 

5 

33,586 

30 

522,434 

45 

1,864,073 

10 

103,939 

4 

161,102 

North Dakota. 

155, S46 



1 

14,544 

2 

32,992 

6 

59,490 



2 

48,820 

South Dakota. 

453,554 

1 

9,984 

1 

14; 152 

2 

258;585 

7 

121,401 



2 

49; 432 

Nebraska. 

630;013 

8 

83,640 

1 

10; 326 

13 

22i; 421 

11 

227,126 

1 

1,000 

2 

86', 500 

Kansas. 

1,390,634 

16 

83,942 

3 

21,797 


626,999 

24 

563,328 



2 

94,568 

South Atlantic: 








Delaware. 

149,415 

4 

45,921 

1 

1,158 

9 

39,722 

4 

52,614 

1 

10,000 



Maryland. 

2,223; 367 

34 

330;132 

2 

2i; 966 

29 

289', 894 

35 

1,526; 938 

7 

12,907 

2 

41,530 

District of Columbia.... 

1,830,404 

13 

134,973 

1 

72,928 

23 

911,393 

12 

604,482 

4 

7,986 

2 

98,642 

Virginia. 

1,378,116 

26 

209,344 

2 

13,938 

20 

655,294 

22 

475,451 

4 

14,089 

1 

10,000 

West Virginia. 

414,254 

7 

43,091 

1 

8,492 

3 

12,131 

14 

288,590 

1 

1,200 

1 

60,750 

North Carolina. 

698,759 

16 

164,482 

1 

7,847 

10 

74,983 

23 

364,630 

1 

425 

1 

86,392 

South Carolina. 

292,252 

10 

149,431 

1 

4,665 

11 

27,518 

6 

110,207 

1 

431 



Georgia. 

810;184 

18 

191,531 


23 

124;299 

18 

410; 965 

2 

9,889 

2 

73,500 

Florida_ 

173; 831 

4 

13; 219 

1 

7,199 

5 

20,859 

11 

112,554 


1 

20,000 

East South Central: 








Kentucky. 

999,487 

19 

186,362 



25 

281,665 

21 

408,912 

2 

6,734 

2 

115,814 

Tennessee. 

785;231 

12 

79; 370 

2 

2,848 

15 

387; 260 

11 

215; 228 

2 

4,159 

3 

96,366 

Alabama 

275,183 

8 

66,377 

2 

6,716 

9 

60,320 

3 

70,486 



1 

71,284 

Mississippi... 

294; 774 

6 

109,747 



1 

47,406 

7 

100; 001 



1 

37; 620 

West South Central: 









Arkansas... 

484,087 

7 

61,886 

1 

3,150 

7 

63,954 

9 

191,951 



2 

163,146 

Louisiana. 

854;117 

19 

208;751 



16 

106;876 

9 

499;278 

2 

13,462 

1 

25; 750 

Oklahoma_ 

210;755 

4 

20; 231 

2 

6,132 

4 

72,435 

3 

31,957 


2 

80,000 

Texas. 

1,171,197 

15 

138;944 

5 

9,846 

18 

344,241 

20 

482,241 

1 

3,000 

3 

192,925 

Mountain: 














Montana... 

374,361 

3 

62,067 

1 

13,637 

3 

49,576 

10 

201,281 



1 

47,800 


192;262 

2 

39; 842 

1 

49,300 

1 

31,000 

4 

47; 120 



1 

25;000 


35; 880 




1 

14; 919 

2 

20; 961 




Colorado. 

1,469; 358 

12 

158,292 

2 

1 12,314 

9 

299; 312 

25 

900,450 

1 

200 

1 

98,790 


345,948 

1 

2,600 

1 

10,500 



12 

320,089 



1 

12,759 


219; 057 

2 

7', 664 




* 6 

211,393 




Utah 

286; 591 

3 

22', 742 



3 

11,268 

5 

202;581 



1 

50,000 


19,000 

1 

19,000 









Pacific: 













962 212 

9 

72,929 

1 

31,811 

17 

223,052 

24 

634,420 





Oregon. 

716,339 

5 

45', 816 

1 

14; 201 

10 

112; 171 

8 

533;039 

1 

822 

1 

10,290 

California. 

4,602,315 

51 

847.535 

6 

90,347 

42 

1,248,723 

45 

2,270,119 

4 

31,644 

2 

113,947 


1 Includes money used for protection of dumb animals, 















































































































































24 BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

PAYMENTS OF INSTITUTIONS DURING THE YEAR, BY CLASS OF INSTITUTION, FOR DIVISIONS AND STATES: 1910 


Table 15 

DIVISION OR STATE. 

Total 

payments 

reported. 

INSTITUTIONS FOR 
CARE OF CHILDREN. 

SOCIETIES 

FOR PROTECTION 
AND CARE OF 
CHILDREN. 

HOMES FOR 
ADULTS, OR ADULTS 
AND CHILDREN. 

HOSPITALS AND 
SANITARIUMS. 

DISPENSARIES. 

INSTITUTIONS FOR 
BLIND AND DEAF. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
insti¬ 
tutions 
report¬ 
ing. 

Payments 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
socie¬ 
ties 
report¬ 
ing. 

Payments 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
insti¬ 
tutions 
report¬ 
ing. 

Payments 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
insti¬ 
tutions 
report¬ 
ing. 

Payments 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
insti¬ 
tutions 
report¬ 
ing. 

Payments 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
insti¬ 
tutions 
report¬ 
ing. 

Payments 

reported. 

United States. 

Sill,498,155 

1,006 

$17,381,486 

163 

$2,009,081 

1,310 

$23,720,381 

1,507 

$61,330,047 

191 

$1,593,140 

110 

1 $5,464,020 

Geographic divisions: 














New England. 

12,836,444 

105 

1,342,732 

16 

230,403 

208 

2,721,261 

192 

7,960,852 

28 

110,017 

13 

471,179 

Middle Atlantic. 

45,959,479 

276 

8,587,202 

49 

974,5S2 

421 

8,018,127 

449 

25,921,582 

73 

852,781 

29 

1,605,205 

East North Central.... 

20,570,840 

230 

3,051,651 

43 

235,236 

251 

5,334,902 

311 

10,436,202 

36 

339,805 

19 

1,173,044 

West North Central... 

9,601,879 

82 

951,862 

20 

180,486 

113 

2,249,614 

186 

5,389,486 

17 

160,502 

16 

669,929 

South Atlantic. 

8,057,684 

134 

1,281,953 

10 

130,712 

133 

2,064,406 

144 

4,113,960 

22 

58,276 

10 

408,377 

East South Central.... 

2,439,602 

48 

474,603 

4 

8,414 

52 

806,611 

42 

811,541 

5 

15,130 

7 

323,303 

West South Central... 

2,614,625 

45 

431,034 

8 

20,586 

45 

590,525 

41 

1,128,600 

3 

23,809 

8 

1 420,071 

Mountain. 

3,197,708 

23 

326,776 

5 

84,358 

17 

420,177 

68 

2,095,802 

1 

200 

5 

270,395 

Pacific. 

6,219,894 

63 

933,673 

8 

144,304 

70 

1,514,758 

74 

3,472,022 

6 

32,620 

3 

122,517 

New England: 














Maine. 

968,769 

10 

95,385 

2 

4,334 

17 

426,935 

15 

417,515 

1 

800 

1 

23,800 

New Hampshire. 

511,172 

14 

99,826 

1 

1,436 

14 

83,715 

23 

326,195 





Vermont. 

245,785 

2 

21,986 



5 

49,818 

9 

173; 981 





Massachusetts. 

8,058,753 

48 

664,541 

10 

171,328 

122 

1,514,223 

107 

5,294,332 

22 

99,120 

8 

315,209 

Rhode Island. 

1,004,077 

11 

119,792 

1 

9,499 

16 

201,374 

13 

633,859 

1 

1,053 

1 

38,500 

Connecticut. 

2,047,888 

20 

341,202 

2 

43,806 

34 

445,196 

25 

1,114,970 

4 

9,044 

3 

93,670 

Middle Atlantic: 














New York. 

28,445,171 

135 

5,761,154 

23 

641,584 

209 

5,019,376 

220 

15,728,357 

51 

323,404 

16 

971,296 

New Jersev. 

3,571,404 

41 

439,018 

11 

106,368 

57 

963,796 

55 

1,996,724 

7 

17,305 

2 

48,193 

Pennsylvania. 

13,942,904 

100 

2,387,030 

15 

226,630 

155 

2,034,955 

174 

8,196,501 

15 

512,072 

11 

585,716 

East North Central: 














Ohio. 

6,360,646 

97 

1,369,356 

13 

35,384 

81 

1,553,955 

75 

3,053,410 

11 

94,785 

5 

253, 756 

Indiana. 

1,937,607 

39 

363,894 

16 

36,498 

36 

632,565 

39 

732,943 

3 

25,009 

2 

146,698 

Illinois. 

7,956,899 

58 

870,610 

5 

96,535 

82 

1,927,837 

110 

4,438,790 

17 

211,958 

5 

411,169 

Michigan. 

2,255,931 

20 

194,874 

3 

34,982 

30 

446,319 

50 

1,348,357 

3 

4,118 

4 

227,281 

Wisconsin. 

2,059,757 

16 

252,917 

6 

31,837 

22 

774,226 

37 

862,702 

2 

3,935 

3 

134,140 

West North Central: 














Minnesota. 

2,568,929 

16 

243,745 

7 

35,617 

27 

313,629 

56 

1,S09,900 

4 

11,894 

2 

154,144 

Iowa. 

1,590,994 

15 

257,135 

2 

47,186 

24 

309,778 

38 

824,149 

1 

46,750 

2 

105,996 

Missouri. 

2,796,036 

26 

282,360 

5 

32,385 

30 

487,710 

45 

1,740,489 

10 

97,544 

4 

155,548 

North Dakota. 

141,766 



1 

16,295 

2 

25,295 

5 

56,053 



2 

44,123 

South Dakota. 

420 ,159 

1 

10,253 

1 

16', 714 

2 

236;716 

7 

126;877 



2 

29;599 

Nebraska. 

691,217 

8 

73;880 

1 

9,835 

13 

257;984 

12 

261;051 

1 

1,200 

2 

87,267 

Kansas. 

1,392,778 

16 

84,489 

3 

22,454 

15 

618,502 

23 

570,967 

1 

3,114 

2 

93,252 

South Atlantic: 














Delaware. 

188,987 

5 

44,116 

1 

1,429 

9 

39,723 

4 

93,719 

1 

10,000 



Maryland. 

2,280>22 

34 

325,094 

2 

23;270 

29 

264;748 

34 

1,607,469 

7 

13 ;599 

2 

45,842 

District of Columbia... 

1,757,550 

13 

143,318 

1 

63,911 

21 

825,312 

12 

617,652 

4 

7,606 

2 

99,751 

Virginia. 

1,435,991 

27 

197,874 

2 

14,572 

21 

649,222 

21 

530,747 

5 

15,076 

1 

28,500 

West Virginia. 

466,824 

7 

60,200 

1 

8,586 

4 

67,795 

13 

268,293 

1 

1,200 

1 

60,750 

North Carolina. 

669,062 

16 

189,424 

1 

7,232 

10 

57,170 

23 

328,419 

1 

425 

1 

86,392 

South Carolina. 

277,928 

10 

138,477 

1 

4,665 

11 

21,913 

6 

112,565 

1 

308 



Georgia. 

795,783 

17 

171,509 


23 

120;316 

19 

426;754 

2 

10,062 

2 

67,142 

Florida. 

185; 537 

5 

li;941 

1 

7,047 

5 

18;207 

12 

128; 342 


1 

20,000 

East South Central: 








Kentucky. 

1,057,994 

20 

197,183 



26 

313,635 

20 

416,496 

3 

10,939 

2 

119,741 

Tennessee. 

'769; 000 

14 

88; 699 

2 

2,873 

16 

388,493 

10 

190,086 

2 

4,191 

3 

94,658 

Alabama. 

312,724 

8 

80,666 

2 

5,541 

9 

57,087 

4 

98,146 



1 

71,284 

Mississippi. 

299,884 

6 

108,055 


1 

47; 396 

8 

106;813 



1 

37,620 

West South Central: 









Arkansas. 

425,497 

7 

50,411 

1 

2,900 

7 

58,996 

10 

184,014 



2 

2 129,146 

Louisiana. 

892', 696 

20 

223,350 


15 

151,984 

9 

471,053 

2 

20,809 

1 

25 500 

Oklahoma. 

194,677 

4 

21,171 

2 

6,143 

4 

66;854 

3 

30,509 


2* 

70,000 

Texas. 

1,101,755 

14 

136,102 

5 

11,543 

19 

312;691 

19 

442; 994 

1 

3,000 

3 

195,'425 

Mountain: 














Montana. 

528,221 

3 

65,716 

1 

13,640 

3 

54,417 

10 

331,648 



1 

62,800 

Idaho. 

258,348 

2 

37; 440 

1 

48; 500 

1 

39 ;000 

5 

78; 408 



1 

55,000 

Wyoming. 

34;831 



1 

14', 919 

2 

19;912 




ColoradoT. 

1,518,815 

12 

160,198 

2 

2 11,718 

9 

300;841 

27 

954;293 

1 

200 

1 

91,565 

New Mexico. 

346,269 

1 

2,600 

1 

10,500 



13 

322,139 



1 

11 030 

Arizona. 

207;023 

2 

21,116 




6 

185;907 





Utah. 

280,284 

2 

15,789 



3 

11,000 

5 

203;495 



1 

50,000 

Nevada. 

23,917 

1 

23;917 







Pacific: 












W ashington. 

988,512 

9 

62,858 

1 

31,811 

17 

208,630 

23 

685,213- 





Oregon. 

735;983 

5 

39; 537 

1 

15;871 

10 

116; 877 

9 

548,028 

1 

413 

1 

15,257 

California. 

4,495,399 

49 

831,278 

6 

96,622 

43 

1,189,251 

42 

2,238,781 


32,207 

2 

107; 260 


1 This amount covers two years for one of the institutions reported 

2 Includes money used for protection of animals. 









































































































































GENERAL SUMMARIES 


25 


VALUE OF PROPERTY OWNED BY INSTITUTIONS AT CLOSE OF THE YEAR, BY CLASS OF INSTITUTION, FOR 

DIVISIONS AND STATES: 1910. 



INSTITUTIONS FOR 
CARE OF CHILDREN. 

SOCIETIES 

FOR PROTECTION 
AND CARE OF 
CHILDREN. 

HOMES FOR 
ADULTS, OR ADULTS 
AND CHILDREN. 

HOSPITALS AND 
SANITARIUMS. 

DISPENSARIES. 

INSTITUTIONS FOR 
BLIND AND DEAF. 

Total value 













reported. 

Num- 


Num- 


Num- 


Num- 


Num- 


Num- 



ber of 


ber of 


ber of 


ber of 


ber of 


ber of 



insti- 

Value. 

socle- 

Value 

insti- 

Value 

insti- 

Value 

insti- 

Value 

insti- 

Value 


tutions 

reported. 

ties 

reported. 

tutions 

reported. 

tutions 

reported. 

tutions 

reported. 

tutions 

reported. 


report- 


report- 


report- 


report- 


report- 


report- 



mg. 


mg. 


mg. 


mg. 


mg. 


mg. 


$643,878,141 

912 

$133,931,551 

81 

$6,727,107 

1,238 

$158,318,121 

1,415 

$306,021,539 

119 

$5,720,052 

106 

$33,159,771 

86,886,642 

91 

10,977,958 

14 

1,939,878 

194 

18,208,980 

181 

50,380,111 

13 

601,270 

13 

4,778,445 

318,478,758 

251 

77,465,216 

26 

3,689,893 

390 

72,660,081 

420 

149,544,928 

47 

2,831,776 

27 

12,286,864 

92,135, 619 

217 

18,961,072 

14 

257,186 

238 

25,424,710 

284 

41,645,965 

28 

1,397,081 

17 

4,449,605 

38,900,536 

73 

6,336,245 

10 

336,570 

108 

9,045,727 

187 

19,167,616 

7 

464,350 

15 

3,550,028 

51.115,306 

118 

9,669,589 

7 

162,100 

126 

15,831,465 

132 

22,877,936 

16 

143, 216 

11 

2,431,000 

11,497,418 

43 

2,684, 400 

1 

1,248 

54 

4,381,014 

41 

2,696,709 

2 

125,159 

7 

1,608,888 

11,927,101 

39 

2,332,149 

2 

23,000 

44 

3,152,530 

40 

4,667,722 

2 

17,000 

8 

1,734,700 

10,840,969 

23 

1,580,533 

4 

103,550 

19 

2,116,231 

67 

6,117,155 

1 

60,000 

5 

863,500 

22,095,792 

57 

3,924,389 

3 

213,682 

65 

7,497,383 

63 

8,923,397 

3 

80,200 

3 

1,456,741 

4,082,169 

7 

597,907 

1 

175 

16 

1,418,629 

15 

1,979,958 

1 

500 

1 

85,000 

3,950,775 

11 

1 189,474 

2 

4,046 

12 

1 090,511 

22 

1,666,744 





1,470,040 

2 

151,000 


5 

235,091 

8 

1,083,949 





62; 010,787 

43 

5,129,793 

8 

1,660,951 

117 

12,326,194 

107 

38,305, 467 

10 

581,270 

8 

4,007,112 

3,577,863 

9 

728,143 

1 

77,100 

14 

1,024,915 

8 

1,679, 205 



1 

68,500 

11,795,008 

19 

3,181,641 

2 

197,606 

30 

2,113,640 

21 

5; 664; 788 

2 

19,500 

3 

617;833 

. 187,760,531 

129 

32,295,447 

14 

3,150,761 

189 

50,103,260 

207 

92,798,979 

30 

2,259,176 

16 

7,152,908 

13,806,200 

36 

2,860,617 

4 

93.141 

53 

3,660,506 

52 

6,764,064 

3 

51,130 

1 

376,742 

. 116,912,027 

86 

42,309,152 

8 

445,991 

148 

18,896,315 

161 

49,981,885 

14 

521,470 

10 

4,757,214 

34,665,751 

89 

8,785,041 

3 

50,952 

76 

8,044,755 

70 

16,142,209 

10 

440,211 

4 

1,202,583 

9,587,512 

38 

2,652,884 

2 

36,000 

35 

3,289,780 

38 

2,614,897 

2 

286,925 

2 

707,026 

30,470,428 

59 

4,837,392 

4 

119,980 

77 

9,314,319 

95 

14,450,117 

13 

658,645 

4 

1,089,975 

9,074,523 

17 

1,668.195 

3 

34,000 

28 

1,603,363 

49 

4,750,472 

2 

4,300 

4 

1,014,193 

8,337,405 

14 

1,017,560 

2 

16,254 

22 

3,172,493 

32 

3,688,270 

1 

7,000 

3 

435,828 

9,045,826 

13 

1,674,256 

3 

83,480 

25 

1,590,935 

56 

5,180,151 

2 

67,000 

2 

450,004 

6,260,436 

16 

1,141,999 

2 

97,000 

24 

1,345,729 

36 

2,844, 660 

1 

131,000 

2 

700,048 

13,905,450 

23 

2,668,502 

2 

70,000 

28 

2,464,639 

42 

7,615,168 

3 

16,350 

4 

1,070,791 

722,786 



1 

26,790 

2 

167,963 

6 

223,033 



1 

305,000 

i anfi 72ft 

1 

75 ftftft 

1 

55,000 

2 

829; 700 

7 

222,835 



2 

124,185 

2,774,155 

7 

275;284 


13 

801,544 

15 

1,072; 327 

1 

250,000 

2 

375,000 

4 SS5 lfiB 

13 

5ft1 204 

i 

4,300 

14 

1,845, 217 

25 

2,009 , 442 


2 

525,000 

Qfi3 713 

4 

312,600 


9 

254,170 

4 

391,943 

1 

5,000 


15,223,085 

27 

2,587; 490 

2 

102,775 

25 

1,848,055 

30 

9,792; 899 

5 

82,366 

3 

809,500 

18,480 325 

11 

1,685,762 



22 

8,997,476 

10 

7,029,787 

4 

5,800 

2 

761,500 

6,727,997 

24 

1,756,410 

2 

20,600 

19 

3,209,190 

22 

i; 696, 597 

3 

5,200 

1 

40,000 

1 4ftS 578 

7 

811 ftftft 

1 

.25 ftftft 

4 

m 318 

14 

904 260 



1 

100,000 

2,887,192 

15 

888,914 

1 

2,725 

9 

206,700 

21 

1,448,853 

1 

40,000 

1 

300;000 

1 5A** Q8ft 

C 

R3Q 278 

1 

1,000 

u 

408 717 

5 

312, 035 

1 

2,850 



2,885,778 

17 

1,226,717 


22 

645;839 

15 

716,222 

1 

2,000 

2 

295,000 

894 658 

5 

61,318 



5 

123,000 

11 

585,340 



1 

125,000 

4 844,278 

18 

1 267,436 



25 

1,629,474 

20 

1,368,209 

1 

159 

2 

579,000 

4,135,674 

12 

'577; 432 



17 

2,373,854 

10 

' 529,500 

1 

125,000 

3 

529,888 

1 Q9ft 424 

7 

292 ftftft 

1 

1,248 

10 

244 686 

3 

502 000 



1 

250,000 

1 197 032 

6 

517,032 


2 

133,000 

8 

297 ; 000 



1 

250,000 

1 488 7ftft 

7 

340 000 



7 

273,500 

11 

425,200 



2 

450,000 

5 449,243 

16 

1,338,399 



15 

1,042,902 

7 

2,550,942 

2 

17,000 

1 

500,000 

424 586 

2 

Q4 75ft 

1 

12 ftftft 

4 

289 886 

2 

30,250 


2 

7,700 

4 554 .579 

14 

55Q ftftft 

1 

11 ftftft 

18 

1 546,242 

20 

1,661,330 



3 

777,000 

1 722 176 

3 

977 ftftft 

1 

18 ftftft 

4 

240,431 

11 

978,245 



1 

219,500 

■ if 1 l)dj ll v 

i 

63,000 

1 

7L 400 

1 

93 000 

4 

248; 583 



1 

45 ; 000 

75 2ftft 

1 

15,000 

2 

60,200 




5,713,176 

12 

876,633 

1 

1,150 

9 

1,747,600 

25 

2,652; 793 

1 

60,000 

1 

375,000 

8QQ 228 

1 

2ft ftftft 

1 

10,000 



13 

845,338 



1 

24,000 

469 ft82 

2 

58 ? Qftft 

1 

i2,000 

6 

39E 183 




• UUtl 

1 274 ftl2 

3 

225 ftftft 



3 

8,200 

6 

940; 813 



1 

200,000 

6ft ftftft 

\ 

60^ 000 

sns ftA2 











1 

40 400 

16 

1 456 2ftft 

17 

1 417 47ft 






5 

UUd, UUO 

45ft 5Q1 

1 

1,23 15ft 

10 

342 195 

9 

1,413,450 



1 

50,000 

16,286,673 

43 

2,968,135 

1 

40; 132 

39 

5,698; 988 

37 

6,092,477 

3 

80,200 

2 

1,406,741 


Table 16 


DIVISION OR STATE. 


United States. 


Geographic divisions: 

New England. 

Middle Atlantic.. 

East North Central... 
West North Central.. 

South Atlantic. 

East South Central.. 
West South Central.. 

Mountain. 

Pacific. 


New England: 

Maine. 

New Hampshire. 

Vermont. 

Massachusetts... 
Rhode Island.... 
Connecticut. 


Middle Atlantic: 

New York. 

New Jersey. 

Pennsylvania.... 


East North Central: 

Ohio. 

Indiana. 

Illinois. 

Michigan. 

Wisconsin. 


West North Central: 

Minnesota. 

Iowa. 

Missouri. 

North Dakota. 

South Dakota. 

Nebraska. 

Kansas. 


South Atlantic: 

Delaware.. 

Maryland. 

District of Columbia. 

Virginia. 

West Virginia. 

North Carolina. 

South Carolina. 

Georgia. 

Florida. 


East South Central: 

Kentucky.. 

Tennessee. 

Alabama. 

Mississippi... 


West South Central: 

Arkansas. 

Louisiana. 

Oklahoma. 

Texas. 


Mountain: 

Montana.... 

Idaho. 

Wyoming... 
Colorado.... 
New Mexico. 

Arizona. 

Utah. 

Nevada. 


Pacific: 

Washington. 

Oregon. 

California.... 













































































































































































26 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 


STATISTICS FOR INDIVIDUAL CLASSES OF INSTITUTIONS. 


The statistics of benevolent institutions are pre¬ 
sented for the different classes of institutions sepa¬ 
rately in summary and analytical Tables 17 to 49, 
inclusive. 

Tables 17 to 25 give the statistics for institutions 
for the care of children; Tables 26 to 28, those for so¬ 


cieties for the protection and care of children; Tables 
29 to 36, those for homes for the care of adults, or 
adults and children; Tables 37 to 39, those for hospi¬ 
tals and sanitariums; Tables 40 to 42, those for dis¬ 
pensaries; and Tables 43 to 49, those for institutions 
for the blind and deaf. 


Class I.—INSTITUTIONS FOR THE CARE OF CHILDREN. 


The institutions covered by this classification are 
those especially designed for children. They include 
orphanages, children’s homes and asylums, receiving 
homes for societies for the protection and care of 
children, detention homes connected with juvenile 
courts, and similar institutions which receive children 
as resident inmates, sometimes for a very short period, 
but do not include day nurseries or homes open for only 
a part of the year. 

CLASSES OF CHILDREN RECEIVED. 

The children received are primarily those who are 
destitute and dependent upon the public for support. 
Of late years, however, the state has come to recog¬ 
nize its responsibility not only for the material welfare 
of its children, but also for their protection from evil 
influences, and in many states under the head of “de¬ 
pendent or neglected children” are included, not 
merely orphans and children deserted by their parents 
or guardians, and thus without visible means of support, 
but also those who live in unfit or disreputable surround¬ 
ings, who are growing up in the habit of begging or 
receiving alms, who frequent vicious places, or who 
in any way give indication of developing into unde¬ 
sirable citizens. Such children, if they actually trans¬ 
gress the law, are amenable to the juvenile courts, 
wherever such are established, and may be committed 
to reformatories, or if the offense is slight, to some 
orphanage or other institution of this class. If there 
is no infraction of the law, the juvenile court may still 
take cognizance of the case and commit the child to 
some benevolent institution, or to the guardianship of 
some person or persons, with a special view to its 
being placed in a family home. In many states offi¬ 
cers in charge of poor relief are instructed to keep 
careful watch for such children, and to see that they 
are provided for in homes for children, or in families, 
detention in almshouses, except in the case of infants, 
being forbidden in an increasing number of states. 
Children’s aid societies, humane societies, societies for 
the prevention of cruelty to children, and similar or¬ 
ganizations are also vested with rights of guardianship 
of dependent children but are expected to direct their 
energies toward the finding of a home for each one 
in some family. Individual action along these lines 
is generally discouraged, and in many states it is illegal 
for any person or any institution to “place” a child 
except by authority of the court, of the state board of 
charities, or of some similar body. 


METHODS OF MANAGEMENT. 

This development in the general purpose of child 
care has resulted in the development of different types 
of institutions and of different methods of manage¬ 
ment. There are still many orphan asylums of the 
old type, but there is an increasing number of state 
detention homes where dependent and delinquent 
children are cared for pending final disposition by the 
juvenile courts; of receiving homes under the conduct 
of home-finding organizations; of state public schools, 
intermediary between the orphanage and the reforma¬ 
tory; and of training homes and schools of many kinds 
which frequently are practically educational institu¬ 
tions. The distinction between these classes is not 
always easily drawn, yet, in general, they stand, as in¬ 
dicating the different efforts to solve the child problem. 

The general methods of conducting institutions for 
the care of children have developed along three lines 
which deserve special note: The extension of super¬ 
visory care by institutions over children placed by 
them in family homes or elsewhere; the adoption by 
children’s homes of the cottage system; and the 
assumption by some state authority of supervision 
over benevolent institutions. 

The responsibility of an institution for the well 
being of a child committed to its guardianship does not 
cease with its placement in a family home, except in 
case of legal adoption. In all other cases the institu¬ 
tion is expected, and in some states is required, to 
keep a careful watch of the conditions in the family 
where the child is placed, with a view to change, should 
it seem desirable. The result is that to record merely 
the number of children resident in an institution at a 
given time does not give an accurate presentation of its 
work, and a column has been added to the tables 
showing the number outside of the institutions, but 
under their care or supervision. 

The introduction of the cottage system in the conduct 
of children’s homes is the result of the conviction that 
the old-time orphanage, with its scores or even hun¬ 
dreds of uniformed children, was not well adapted to 
the securing of the best results in individual character. 

The assumption by state authority of supervision 
over benevolent institutions has already had notable 
results in the betterment of conditions in those institu¬ 
tions, in the preparation of new laws, in the inaugura¬ 
tion of new methods (including the two already noted), 
and in the emphasis laid on more complete and accurate 




INSTITUTIONS FOR THE CARE OF CHILDREN. 


27 


reports. While ultimately it will doubtless extend to 
all classes of institutions, its chief application has 
hitherto been to those for the care of children, and the 
Bureau of the Census is under obligations to the various 
state boards for much of the completeness of the present 
report. 

The information secured by the census canvass in 
regard to the different institutions for the care of 
children included in this report, together with their 
addresses, is shown in detail, by states, on pages 86 
to 157. Table 19 gives the principal statistics by 
states and geographic divisions. 

The institutions covered by this table are mostly of 
the old type, where orphan or dependent children are 
gathered in a single building under the care of a private 
association. There are, however, 92 county homes 
(50 in Ohio, 17 in Indiana, and 7 in Connecticut); 18 
state homes, several of these being for the orphans of 
soldiers or sailors; and 5 municipal homes. There are 
also 9 detention homes for dependent and delinquent 
children under the care of the juvenile courts, and 
a number of receiving homes for societies for the pro¬ 
tection and care of children (Class II). The cottage 
system has been adopted by 168 homes. 

The total number of homes reported, 1,151, repre¬ 
sents an increase of 76 over the number reported in 
1904. The following table arranges the states accord¬ 
ing to the number of institutions reported in 1910: 

Institutions for the Care of Children, Distributed by 
States: 1910. 


Table 17 

STATE. 

Number. 

STATE. 

Number. 

United States 

1,151 

Colorado. 

14 




14 


154 

i Washington. 

14 

Ohio. 

106 

1 Rhode Island. 

13 


105 

Maine. 

12 

Illinois. 

64 

South Carolina. 

10 


56 

Arkansas. 

9 


50 

Nebraska. 

9 


49 

West Virginia. 

9 


47 

AlabamaT. 

8 


36 

Florida. 

7 


32 

Mississippi. 

7 


32 

Oregon?.*. 

6 


25 

Delaware. 

5 


24 

Oklahoma. 

5 


24 

Vermont. 

4 


23 

Montana. 

3 


22 

Utah. 

3 


20 

Arizona. 

2 


19 

Idaho. 

2 


18 

New Mexico. 

2 


17 

North Dakota. 

2 


17 

South Dakota. 

2 


16 

Nevada. 

1 


16 

Wyoming. 

1 

Tennessee. 

15 




The rank of the states, as shown in this table, is 
determined by varying conditions. The high rank of 
New York and Pennsylvania is natural, in view of the 
size and peculiar type of their population; that of 
Ohio is due chiefly to its system of county homes, 
which also figures largely in Indiana and Connecticut. 

The following statement showing' the number of 
homes in proportion to the population in the different 
geographic divisions is of interest, especially as indi¬ 
cating the result of the activities of the charitable 


organizations on the Pacific coast, which place that 


division in the lead, above 
Middle Atlantic divisions: 

Pacific division. 

New England division. 

Middle Atlantic division. 

East North Central division. 

South Atlantic division. 

Mountain division.. 

West North Central division. 

West South Central division. 

East South Central division. 


even the New England and 


One home to every 55,162 inhabitants. 
One home to every 55,531 inhabitants. 
One home to every 62,511 inhabitants. 
One home to every 70,195 inhabitants. 
One home to every 80,229 inhabitants. 
One home to every 94,054 inhabitants. 
One home to every 122,504 inhabitants. 
One home to every 151,457 inhabitants. 
One home to every 152,907 inhabitants. 


COTTAGE SYSTEM. 

The following table shows, by states, the average 
number of inmates per institution and the number of 
institutions reporting, and the extent to which the 
cottage system has been adopted; the states are ar¬ 
ranged according to the average number of inmates 
per institution. It is noticeable that the extension of 
the cottage system has had a close relation to the em¬ 
phasis laid by the states on county homes and general 
state supervision. Thus Ohio, w r ith its system of 
county homes, leads in the adoption of the cottage 
system, with New York, Pennsylvania, California, and 
North Carolina following closely, while Indiana and 
Connecticut, also with county homes, surpass other 
states of even greater size. 


Table 18 

INSTITUTIONS FOR THE CARE OF 

children: 1910. 

STATE. 

Average 
number of 
inmates per 
institution 
reporting. 

Number of 
institutions 
reporting 
inmates. 

Number of 
institutions 
reporting 
cottage 
system. 

New York. 

210 

144 

20 

South Carolina. 

127 

10 

6 

Montana. 

112 

2 

1 

Colorado. 

111 

12 

3 

Pennsylvania. 

111 

, 102 

14 

California. 

106 

53 

10 

North Carolina. 

106 

16 

10 

Louisiana. 

102 

24 

Minnesota. 

98 

16 

3 

Oregon. 

94 

6 


Connecticut. 

93 

21 

4 

Iowa. 

93 

18 

2 

Missouri. 

92 

31 

3 

Nevada . 

91 

1 


Mississippi. 

90 

7 

1 

Wisconsin. 

89 

18 

3 

Illinois. 

88 

63 

16 

Utah . 

87 

3 


85 

48 

1 

Ohio. 

85 

100 

24 


83 

11 

2 


81 

23 

3 


78 

11 

2 


76 

8 

1 

District of Columbia. 

76 

14 

2 

Maryland. 

75 

33 

2 


75 

45 

2 


74 

2 


Georgia. 

72 

20 

5 

Nebraska. 

72 

9 

1 

Texas. 

70 

18 

3 


66 

17 



64 

10 

4 

Delaware. 

62 

5 

1 


60 

2 

1 

Indiana. 

59 

44 

6 


58 

14 

1 

Vermont. 

56 

2 

1 


52 

15 

1 


51 

8 

1 


46 

27 

6 


44 

21 



41 

1 



38 

2 



35 

7 



32 

6 

1 


29 

2 



24 

4 

1 


13 

1 




















































































































































28 BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

GENERAL SUMMARY OF STATISTICS FOR INSTITUTIONS FOR 


Table 19 


CHILDREN UNDER CARE OF INSTITUTIONS AT CLOSE OF THE TEAR. 



DIVISION OR STATE. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
insti¬ 
tutions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ed. 

Total 
number 
of chil¬ 
dren re¬ 
ported. 

In institutions. 

In families and elsewhere. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
insti¬ 
tutions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Number of children. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
insti¬ 
tutions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Number of children. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
insti¬ 
tutions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Number of children. 

Total. 1 

With sex reported. 

Total. 1 

With sex reported. 

Total. 1 

With sex reported. 

Male. 

Female. 

Male. 

Female. 

Male. 

Female. 

1 

United States. 

1,151 

147,997 

1,077 

108,070 

56,887 

46,785 

445 

39,927 

20,225 

16,434 

1,065 

85,829 

50,874 

30,487 


Geographic divisions: 















2 

New England. 

118 

14,023 

110 

9,023 

4,891 

3,891 

45 

5,000 

2,305 

2,232 

112 

8,066 

3,553 

2,670 

3 

Middle Atlantic. 

309 

51.315 

291 

44,963 

25,251 

19,207 

113 

6,352 

3.812 

2,430 

287 

35,873 

24,679 

10,940 

4 

East North Central. 

260 

33,082 

248 

20,153 

10,910 

7,538 

133 

12,929 

6,235 

4,794 

246 

18,712 

11,317 

7,238 

5 

West North Central. 

95 

15,912 

93 

7,721 

3,901 

3,310 

56 

8,191 

4,265 

3,655 

90 

7,581 

2,856 

2,907 

6 

South Atlantic. 

152 

12,692 

139 

10,107 

4,347 

5,100 

47 

2,585 

983 

1,082 

138 

3,883 

1,977 

1,704 

7 

East South Central. 

55 

4,512 

50 

2,979 

1,266 

1,592 

16 

1,533 

707 

826 

47 

1,456 

676 

743 

8 

West South Central. 

58 

4,741 

53 

4,136 

1,971 

1,968 

9 

605 

543 

62 

49 

2,360 

1,345 

938 

9 

Mountain. 

28 

2,815 

24 

2,166 

913 

1,042 

5 

649 

301 

348 

27 

2,589 

1,391 

1,198 

10 

Pacific. 

76 

8,905 

69 

6,822 

3,437 

3,137 

21 

2,083 

1,074 

1,005 

69 

5,309 

3,080 

2,149 


New England: 















11 

Maine. 

12 

883 

11 

853 

450 

403 

3 

30 


30 

12 

208 

92 

112 

12 

New Hampshire. 

17 

1,742 

17 

1,125 

565 

534 

5 

617 

8 

212 

• 17 

625 

318 

258 

13 

Vermont. 

4 

116 

2 

113 

95 

18 

2 

3 

1 

2 

2 

58 

48 

10 

14 

Massachusetts. 

49 

7,290 

48 

4,069 

2,122 

1,764 

19 

3,221 

1,735 

1.420 

48 

5,632 

2,341 

1,687 

15 

Rhode Island. 

13 

1,284 

11 

913 

451 

442 

4 

371 

180 

191 

11 

724 

346 

378 

16 

Connecticut. 

23 

2,708 

21 

1,950 

1,208 

730 

12 

758 

381 

377 

22 

819 

408 

225 


Middle Atlantic: 















17 

New York. 

154 

33.571 

144 

30,247 

17,065 

13,029 

48 

3,324 

2,064 

1,260 

143 

26,465 

19.476 

6,989 

18 

New Jersey. 

50 

4,943 

45 

3,365 

1,595 

1,579 

22 

1,578 

911 

652 

43 

5,131 

2,783 

2,337 

19 

Pennsylvania. 

105 

12,801 

102 

11,351 

6,591 

4,599 

43 

1,450 

837 

518 

101 

4,277 

2,420 

1,614 


East North Central: 















20 

Ohio. 

106 

12,206 

100 

8,479 

4,463 

3,294 

64 

3,727 

1,711 

1,643 

102 

6,995 

4,118 

2,759 

21 

Indiana. 

47 

4.236 

44 

2,600 

1,482 

1,055 

25 

1,636 

804 

678 

45 

1,277 

689 

549 

22 

Illinois. 

64 

8,238 

63 

5.603 

3,128 

1,782 

20 

2,635 

1,512 

955 

58 

7,348 

4,739 

2,609 

23 

Michigan. 

24 

4,199 

23 

1,868 

972 

731 

15 

2,331 

1,373 

948 

24 

1,951 

1.137 

814 

24 

Wisconsin. 

19 

4,203 

18 

1,603 

865 

676 

9 

2,600 

835 

570 

17 

1,141 

634 

507 


West North Central: 















25 

Minnesota. 

16 

3,130 

16 

1,569 

914 

655 

10 

1,561 

892 

669 

16 

1,194 

503 

615 

26 

Iowa. 

18 

4,151 

18 

1,667 

824 

556 

8 

2,484 

1,215 

1,250 

17 

1,182 

492 

406 

27 

Missouri. 

32 

5,030 

31 

2,865 

1,274 

1,373 

19 

2,165 

1,131 

782 

29 

3,677 

1.050 

1.215 

28 

North Dakota. 

2 

461 

2 

121 

59 

62 

1 

340 

190 

150 

1 

65 

38 

27 

29 

South Dakota. 

2 

628 

2 

78 

43 

35 

2 

550 

247 

303 

2 

106 

48 

58 

30 

Nebraska. 

9 

1,126 

9 

646 

344 

302 

6 

480 

270 

210 

9 

642 

361 

235 

31 

Kansas. 

16 

1,386 

15 

775 

443 

327 

10 

611 

320 

291 

16 

715 

364 

351 


South Atlantic: 















32 

Delaware. 

5 

391 

5 

309 

179 

60 

2 

82 

55 

27 

5 

92 

62 

30 

33 

Maryland. 

36 

2,917 

33 

2,493 

1,016 

1,291 

8 

424 

160 

264 

35 

1,310 

695 

596 

34 

District of Columbia. 

14 

1,190 

14 

1,063 

537 

526 

7 

127 

81 

46 

14 

503 

285 

218 

35 

Virginia. 

32 

1,521 

27 

1,243 

491 

738 

8 

278 

87 

191 

27 

309 

137 

172 

36 

West Virginia. 

9 

1,289 

8 

407 

139 

141 

4 

882 

175 

187 

8 

349 

90 

76 

37 

North Carolina. 

17 

2,120 

16 

1,698 

794 

904 

6 

422 

194 

228 

14 

388 

210 

178 

38 

South Carolina. 

10 

1,529 

10 

1,270 

602 

668 

2 

259 

195 

64 

10 

232 

129 

103 

39 

Georgia. 

22 

1,536 

20 

1,431 

557 

668 

8 

105 

36 

69 

21 

604 

331 

273 

40 

Florida. 

7 

199 

6 

193 

32 

104 

2 

6 


6 

4 

96 

38 

58 


East South Central: 















41 

Kentucky. 

25 

2,291 

21 

930 

449 

481 

11 

1,361 

596 

765 

20 

526 

272 

254 

42 

Tennessee. 

15 

933 

14 

813 

313 

409 

2 

120 

62 

58 

13 

595 

255 

303 

43 

Alabama. 

8 

655 

8 

603 

271 

332 

3 

52 

49 

3 

8 

198 

87 

111 

44 

Mississippi. 

7 

633 

7 

633 

233 

370 





6 

137 

62 

75 


West South Central: 















45 

Arkansas. 

9 

243 

7 

243 

96 

122 





6 

179 

87 

92 

46 

Louisiana. 

24 

3,107 

24 

2,534 

1,290 

1,211 

6 

573 

533 

40 

21 

1,352 

894 

458 

47 

Oklahoma. 

5 

95 

4 

95 

50 

45 





4 

102 

39 

63 

48 

Texas. 

20 

1,296 

18 

1,264 

535 

590 

3 

32 

10 

22 

18 

727 

325 

325 


Mountain: 















49 

Montana. 

3 

224 

2 

224 

99 

125 





3 

207 

114 

93 

50 

Idaho. 

2 

295 

2 

57 

26 

31 

2 

238 

80 

158 

2 

249 

129 

120 

51 

Wyoming. 

1 

13 

1 

13 

9 

4 





1 

13 

9 

4 

52 

Colorado”. 

14 

1,740 

12 

1,329 

623 

551 

3 

411 

221 

190 

13 

1,724 

965 

759 

53 

New Mexico. 

2 

148 

2 

148 


148 





2 

74 


74 

54 

Arizona. 

2 

41 

1 

41 


41 





2 

83 

29 

54 

55 

Utah. 

3 

263 

3 

263 

112 

95 





3 

226 

136 

90 

56 

Nevada. 

1 

91 

1 

91 

44 

47 





1 

13 

9 

4 


Pacific: 















67 

W ashington. 

14 

1,302 

10 

639 

402 

237 

4 

663 

367 

296 

11 

1,069 

579 

410 

58 

Oregon. 

6 

1,265 

6 

563 

235 

328 

3 

702 

259 

443 

5 

414 

175 

239 

59 

California. 

56 

6,338 

53 

5,620 

2,800 

2,572 

14 

718 

448 

266 

53 

3,826 

2,326 

1,500 


CHILDREN RECEIVED DURING 
THE YEAR. 


•' Includes those whose sex was not reported. 




































































































































INSTITUTIONS 


FOR THE CARE OF CHILDREN. 


THE CARE OF CHILDREN, BY DIVISIONS AND STATES: 1910. 


29 


CHILDREN PLACED 

DURING THE YEAR. 

CHILDREN DISCHARGED DURING THE 
YEAR. 

RECEIPTS DURING THE 
YEAR. 

PAYMENTS DURING THE 
YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF THE YEAR. 



Number of children. 


Number of children. 








Number 




Number 




Number 


Number 


Number 



of insti- 




of insti- 




of insti- 

Amount 

of insti- 

Amount 

of insti- 

Amount 


tutions 




tutions 




tutions 

reported. 

tutions 

reported. 

tutions 

reported. 


reporting. 


v\ lth sex reported. 

reporting. 


With sex reported. 

reporting. 


reporting. 


reporting. 




Total . 1 




Total . 1 












Male. 

Female. 



Male. 

Female. 








522 

15,072 

7,055 

6,949 

863 

57,300 

35,576 

19,653 

1,004 

$19,140,342 

1,006 

$17,381,486 

912 

$133,931,551 


55 

2,358 

1,017 

988 

96 

5,236 

2,834 

1,818 

102 

1,324,260 

105 

1,342,732 

91 

10,977,958 

< 

139 

2,603 

1,292 

1,237 

248 

28,437 

19,213 

9,093 

274 

10,213,100 

276 

8,587,202 

251 

77,465,216 


148 

4,030 

2,067 

1,867 

191 

12,108 

7,646 

3,986 

235 

3,193,354 

230 

3,051,651 

217 

18,961,072 


48 

2,261 

1,109 

1,088 

76 

3,539 

1,611 

1,431 

82 

977,349 

82 

951,862 

73 

6,336,245 

1 

57 

992 

279 

374 

103 

1,777 

791 

738 

132 

1,282,124 

134 

1,281,953 

118 

9,669,589 


20 

636 

273 

345 

40 

689 

316 

309 

45 

441,856 

48 

474,603 

43 

2,684,400 


16 

338 

93 

121 

39 

1,319 

711 

578 

45 

429,812 

45 

431,034 

39 

2,332,149 


7 

420 

211 

209 

13 

815 

510 

305 

24 

312,207 

23 

326,776 

23 

1,580,533 


32 

1,434 

714 

720 

57 

3,380 

1,944 

1,395 

65 

966,280 

63 

933,673 

57 

3,924,389 

U 

6 

90 

54 

36 

8 

112 

47 

65 

11 

83,211 

10 

95,385 

7 

597,907 

11 

10 

65 

33 

32 

15 

409 

213 

173 

12 

99,936 

14 

99,826 

11 

1,189,474 

i: 

1 

15 

15 


2 

28 

16 

12 

2 

18,673 

2 

21,986 

2 

151,000 

i: 

20 

1,411 

515 

543 

40 

3,695 

2,059 

1,167 

47 

650,220 

48 

664,541 

43 

5,129,793 

l- 

4 

71 

36 

35 

11 

528 

259 

269 

10 

119,024 

11 

119,792 

9 

728,143 

i. 

14 

706 

364 

342 

20 

464 

240 

132 

20 

353,196 

20 

341,202 

19 

3,181,641 

it 

76 

1,413 

723 

644 

135 

21,939 

15,829 

6,082 

135 

5,691,435 

135 

5,761,154 

129 

32,295,447 

l 

20 

499 

244 

243 

29 

3,567 

1,636 

1,901 

41 

444,816 

41 

439,018 

36 

2,860,617 

i> 

43 

691 

325 

350 

84 

2,931 

1,748 

1,110 

98 

4,076,849 

100 

2,387,030 

86 

42,309,152 

i> 

68 

1,628 

871 

718 

79 

4,044 

2,236 

1,539 

98 

1,398,896 

97 

1,369,356 

89 

8,785,041 

2( 

31 

695 

328 

329 

28 

568 

296 

201 

41 

382,154 

39 

363,894 

38 

2,652,884 

2 

28 

808 

401 

407 

48 

5,625 

3,984 

1.631 

61 

972,764 

58 

870,610 

59 

4,837,392 

2. 

14 

552 

267 

266 

20 

1,175 

748 

343 

19 

176,170 

20 

194,874 

17 

1,668,195 

2: 

7 

347 

200 

147 

16 

696 

382 

272 

16 

263,370 

16 

252,917 

14 

1,017,560 

2 

8 

524 

276 

248 

14 

616 

189 

423 

15 

242,230 

16 

243,745 

13 

1,674,256 

2. 

7 

733 

330 

339 

14 

476 

142 

127 

16 

257,113 

15 

257,135 

16 

1,141,999 

2t 

13 

438 

221 

217 

27 

1,905 

1,021 

631 

26 

300,440 

26 

282,360 

23 

2,668,502 

2 

1 

42 

24 

18 

1 

31 

8 

23 







2> 

2 

116 

49 

67 

2 

28 

15 

13 

1 

9,984 

1 

10,253 

1 

75,000 

2< 

6 

230 

122 

108 

8 

290 

162 

128 

8 

83,640 

8 

73,880 

7 

275,284 

3( 

11 

178 

87 

91 

10 

193 

74 

86 

16 

83,942 

16 

84,489 

13 

501,204 

3 

2 

23 

14 

9 

5 

66 

39 

27 

4 

45,921 

5 

44,116 

4 

312,600 

3 

12 

208 

39 

143 

32 

729 

251 

245 

34 

330,132 

34 

325,094 

27 

2,587,490 

3, 

6 

46 

24 

22 

13 

411 

239 

172 

13 

134,973 

13 

143,318 

11 

1,685,762 

3 

10 

75 

34 

41 

21 

118 

46 

72 

26 

209,344 

27 

197,874 

24 

1,756,410 

3 

8 

361 

72 

63 

5 

57 

25 

28 

7 

43,091 

7 

60,200 

7 

311,000 

3< 

8 

113 

58 

55 

9 

99 

43 

56 

16 

164,482 

16 

189,424 

15 

888,914 

3 

3 

14 

9 

5 

6 

156 

90 

66 

10 

149,431 

10 

138,477 

8 

839,378 

3 

5 

104 

17 

16 

11 

140 

58 

71 

18 

191,531 

17 

171,509 

17 

1,226,717 

3 

3 

48 

12 

20 

1 

1 


1 

4 

13,219 

5 

11,941 

5 

61,318 

4( 

11 

534 

223 

293 

17 

278 

155 

123 

19 

186,362 

20 

197,183 

18 

1,267,436 

4 

3 

29 

11 

18 

11 

258 

93 

101 

12 

79,370 

14 

88,699 

12 

577,432 

4 

5 

62 

34 

28 

7 

106 

41 

65 

8 

66,377 

8 

80,666 

7 

322,500 

4 

1 

11 

5 

6 

5 

47 

27 

20 

6 

109,747 

6 

108,055 

6 

517,032 

4 

2 

25 

13 

12 

4 

20 

10 

10 

7 

61,886 

7 

50,411 

7 

340,000 

4, 

8 

91 

45 

46 

18 

1,012 

568 

444 

19 

208,751 

20 

223,350 

16 

1,338,399 

4( 

1 

10 

5 

5 

4 

56 

28 

28 

4 

20,231 

4 

21,171 

2 

94,750 

4‘ 

5 

212 

30 

58 

13 

231 

105 

96 

15 

138,944 

14 

136,102 

14 

559,000 

4 





1 

99 

49 

50 

3 

62,067 

3 

65,716 

3 

277,000 

4 

2 

159 

75 

84 

2 

94 

32 

62 

2 

39,842 

2 

37,440 

1 

63,000 

5( 


3 

1 

2 

1 

4 

3 

1 







5 

4 

258 

135 

123 

8 

599 

415 

184 

12 

158,292 

12 

160,198 

12 

876,633 

5 









1 

2,600 

1 

2,600 

1 

20,000 

5, 









2 

7,664 

2 

21,116 

2 

58,900 

5 









3 

22,742 

2 

15,789 

3 

225,000 

5 





1 

19 

11 

8 

1 

19,000 

1 

23,917 

1 

60,000 

5 

3 

326 

161 

165 

9 

737 

404 

333 

9 

72,929 

9 

62,858 

9 

505,663 

5 

3 

407 

139 

268 

3 

112 

57 

55 

5 

45,816 

5 

39,537 

5 

450,591 

5 

26 

701 

414 

287 

45 

2,531 

1,483 

1,007 

51 

847,535 

49 

831,278 

43 

2,968,135 

5 








































































30 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 


PLACEMENT IN FAMILIES. 

The degree to which the method of placement of 
children in families has been carried by institutions 
of this class is illustrated by the accompanying table 
giving, by states, the number so placed during the year. 
Detailed statistics as to this phase of work are given 
in Table 57. 


Children Placed in Families by Institutions for the Care 
of Children: 1910. 


Table 20 

STATE. 

Number. 

STATE. 

Number. 

United States . 

15,072 

Maryland. 

208 



178 

Ohio. 

1,628 

Idaho. 

159 

New York. 

1,413 

South Dakota. 

116 

M assachusetts. 

1 411 

North Carolina. 

113 

Illinois. 

808 

Georgia. 

104 

Iowa. 

733 

Louisiana. 

91 

Connecticut. 

706 

Maine. 

90 

California. 

701 

Virginia. 

75 

Indiana. 

695 

Rhode Island. 

71 

Pennsylvania. 

691 

New Hampshire. 

65 

Michigan. 

552 

Alabama.!. 

62 

Kentucky. 

534 

Florida. 

48 

Minnesota. 

524 

District of Columbia. 

46 

New Jersey. 

499 

North Dakota. 

42 

Missouri. 

438 

Tennessee. 

29 

Oregon. 

407 

Arkansas. 

25 

West Virginia. 

361 

Delaware. 

23 

Wisconsin. 

347 

Vermont. 

15 

Washington. 

326 

South Carolina. 

14 

Colorado. 

258 

Mississippi. 

11 

Nebraska. 

230 

Oklahoma. 

10 

Texas. 

212 

Wyoming. 

3 






The distribution, by geographic divisions, together 
with the number per 100,000 population, is given in 
the following table: 


Table 21 

NUMBER OF CHILDREN 
IN CARE OF INSTITU¬ 
TIONS for children: 
1910. 

DIVISION. 




Total. 

Per 

100,000 

popula¬ 

tion. 

Middle Atlantic. 

51,315 
33,082 
15,912 
14,023 
12,692 
8,905 
4,741 

265 

East North Central. 

181 

West North Central. 

137 

New England. 

214 

South Atlantic. 

104 

Pacific. 

212 

West South Central. 

54 

East South Central. 

4; 512 
2,815 

53 

Mountain. 

107 



Table 22 shows, by states, the distribution of the 
children reported, including both the inmates of the 
institutions and those under their care in families. 


COMPARISON WITH REPORT FOR 1904. 

Comparison with the report for 1904 is materially 
affected by the inclusion in this report, as already 
noted, of the children outside of institutions but still 
under their care, whereas the report for 1904 was 
limited to those resident in the institutions them¬ 


selves. Thus, of a total of 147,997 children reported 
by these institutions as under their care, 39,927, or 
27.0 per cent, were outside of the institutions. A 
comparison of the children resident in institutions 
alone shows an increase over the figures for 1904 of 
15,781. 


Children Under Care of Institutions for the Care of 
Children at Close of the Year: 1910. 


Table 22 

STATE. 

Number. 

STATE. 

Number. 

United States . 

147,997 

Washington. 

1,302 

1,296 



New York. 

33,571 

Rhode Island. 

1,289 

Pennsylvania.... 

12,801 

12,206 

8,238 

7,290 

6,338 

5,030 

4,943 

4,236 

4,203 

West Virginia. 

1 284 

Ohio..”.. 

Oregon . 

P265 

Illinois. 

District of Columbia. 

1,190 

Massac husetts. 

Nebraska. 

1,126 

California. 

Tennessee. 

933 

Missouri. 

Maine. 

883 

New Jersey. 

Alabama. 

655 

Indiana...'.. 

Mississippi. 

633 

Wisconsin. 

South Dakota. 

628 

Michigan. 

4,199 

North Dakota. 

461 

Iowa. 

4,151 

Delaware. 

391 

Minnesota. 

3j 130 

Idaho. 

295 

Louisiana. 

3| 107 

Utah. 

263 

Maryland. 

2, 917 
2,708 
2,291 
2,120 
1,742 

Arkansas. 

243 

Connecticut... 

Montana. 

224 

Kentucky. 

Florida. 

199 

North Carolina. 

New Mexico. 

148 

New Hampshire. 

Vermont. 

116 

Colorado. 

l’ 740 

Oklahoma. 

95 

Georgia. 

l’ 536 

Nevada. 

91 

South Carolina. 

l'529 

Arizona. 

41 

Virginia. 

1,521 

Wyoming. 

13 

Kansas. 

U386 



In this connection it should be remembered that 
the custom of placing children in homes, as already 
stated, is of comparatively recent origin. Massachu¬ 
setts, New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut had 
led the way, and by 1904 a considerable number of 
states had adopted this method of caring for depend¬ 
ent children. Either because the w T ork was poorly 
organized, or because it was judged that that class of 
children did not properly come within the scope of 
the report, there was no effort in 1904 to learn the 
number of children so provided for. It becomes there¬ 
fore impossible to make any complete or exact state¬ 
ment as to the relative situation in the two years. 
In some states, as in Indiana, Kentucky, Tennessee, 
and South Dakota, while the total number of chil¬ 
dren under care of institutions has increased, there 
has been a decrease in the number resident in the 
institutions. This would appear to indicate not so 
much a change in the actual conditions as a change 
in the efficiency of the methods of meeting those 
conditions. 

That dependency increases witth the population is 
undoubtedly true, but whether or not it increases in 
the same ratio can not be ascertained without more 
careful and thorough study than can be given at this 
time. The next comparative summary presents the 
facts for the different states. 









































































































































INSTITUTIONS FOR THE CARE OF CHILDREN. 

INMATES OF INSTITUTIONS FOR THE CARE OF CHILDREN—COMPARATIVE SUMMARY 1910 AND 1904. 


31 


Table 23 

1910 

1904 

DIVISION OR STATE. 

Children 
in insti¬ 
tutions. 

Children 
outside 
under care. 

Total 
under 
care of in¬ 
stitutions. 

In insti¬ 
tutions. 

United States. 

108,070 

39, 927 

147,997 

92,289 

New England. 

9,023 

5,000 

14,023 

8,291 

Maine. 

853 

30 

883 

569 

New Hampshire. 

1,125 

617 

1,742 

981 

Vermont. 

113 

3 

116 

181 

Massachusetts. 

4,069 

3,221 

7,290 

3,953 

Rhode Island. 

913 

371 

1,284 

753 

Connecticut. 

1,950 

758 

2; 708 

1,854 

Middle Atlantic. 

44,963 

6,352 

51,315 

37,923 

New York. 

30,247 

3,324 

33,571 

24,907 

New Jersey. 

3,365 

1,578 

4,943 

2,598 

Pennsylvania. 

11,351 

1,450 

12,801 

10,418 

East North Central. 

20,153 

12,929 

33,082 

18,801 

Ohio. 

8,479 

3,727 

12,206 

7,670 

Indiana. 

2,600 

1,636 

4,236 

2,934 

Illinois. 

5,603 

2,635 

8,238 

5; 245 

Michigan. 

1,868 

2,331 

4,199 

1,669 

Wisconsin. 

1,603 

2,600 

4,203 

1,283 

West North Central. 

7,721 

8,191 

15,912 

6,208 

Minnesota. 

1,569 

1,561 

3,130 

1,220 

Iowa. 

1,667 

2,484 

4,151 

1,162 

Missouri. 

2,865 

2,165 

5,030 

2,697 

North Dakota. 

121 

340 

461 

68 

South Dakota. 

78 

550 

628 

101 

Nebraska. 

646 

480 

1,126 

393 

Kansas. 

775 

611 

1,386 

567 

South Atlantic. 

10,107 

2,585 

12,692 

7,863 

Delaware. 

309 

82 

391 

391 

Maryland. 

2,493 

424 

2,917 

2,165 


DIVISION OR STATE. 


South Atlantic— Continued. 

District of Columbia. 

Virginia. 

West Virginia. 

North Carolina. 

South Carolina. 

Georgia. 

Florida. 

East South Central. 

Kentucky. 

Tennessee. 

Alabama. 

Mississippi. 

West South Central. 

Arkansas. 

Louisiana.. 

Oklahoma. 

Texas. 

Mountain.. 

Montana. 

Idaho.. 

Wyoming. 

Colorado.. 

New Mexico. 

Arizona.. 

Utah.. 

Nevada.. 

Pacific. 

Washington.. 

Oregon. 

California. 


1910 

1904 

Children 
in insti¬ 
tutions. 

Children 
outside 
under care. 

Total 
under 
care of in¬ 
stitutions. 

In insti¬ 
tutions. 

1,063 

127 

1,190 

967 

1,243 

278 

1,521 

938 

407 

882 

1,289 

198 

1,698 

422 

2,120 

1,247 

1,270 

259 

1,529 

1,111 

1,431 

105 

1,536 

727 

193 

6 

199 

119 

2,979 

1,533 

4,512 

3,143 

930 

1,361 

2,291 

1,482 

813 

120 

933 

862 

603 

52 

655 

529 

633 


633 

270 

4,136 

605 

4,741 

3,390 

243 


243 

177 

2,534 

573 

3,107 

1,899 

95 


95 

253 

1,264 

32 

1,296 

1,061 

2,166 

649 

2,815 

1,376 

224 


224 

332 

57 

238 

295 


13 


13 


1,329 

411 

1,740 

650 

148 


148 

106 

41 


41 


263 

. 

263 

232 

91 


91 

56 

6,822 

2,083 

8,905 

5,294 

639 

663 

1,302 

359 

563 

702 

1,265 

255 

5,620 

718 

6,338 

4,680 


In accordance with the modern tendency to regard 
inmates of institutions, or other “wards of the state,” 
as individuals, each with distinctive characteristics, 
rather than in the mass, an effort has been made to 
classify the children reported by the institutions into 
certain broad groups. The results have not been 
wholly satisfactory. In many cases the superin¬ 
tendents or others in charge of the institutions evi¬ 
dently had no exact records, in others there was 
apparent uncertainty as to the class in which the par¬ 
ticular children should be included. Table 24 presents 
the results so far as it has been possible to interpret 
the schedules. The distinction between orphans and 
half-orphans was made in very few T cases, and it was 
found to be impracticable to separate even the found¬ 


lings, so that all these classes are included under one 
head. The children included under the heading “News¬ 
boys and other working boys or girls” represent for 
the most part the inmates of several newsboys’ homes, 
but this classification is incomplete because a number 
of similar institutions are included in Class III (Homes 
for adults, or adults and .children). The majority of 
the children reported as “Defective or invalids” are 
cripples in homes for such children. Those classed as 
delinquent, wayward, or truant are reported chiefly 
by the detention homes, although it is evident that the 
classification is not always exact, and the results are 
by no means complete. In the final column are in¬ 
cluded all children regarding whose classification the 
officers of the institutions were in doubt. 



















































































































32 • BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

CHILDREN IN INSTITUTIONS FOR THE CARE OF CHILDREN AT THE CLOSE OF THE YEAR, BY CLASSES, FOR 

DIVISIONS AND STATES: 1910, 


Table 24 


DIVISION OR STATE. 


United States.... 

Geographic divisions: 

New England. 

Middle Atlantic. 

East North Central... 
West North Central. 

South Atlantic. 

East South Central... 
West South Central.. 

Mountain. 

Pacific. 

New England: 

Maine. 

New Hampshire.... 

Vermont. 

Massachusetts. 

Rhode Island. 

Connecticut. 

Middle Atlantic: 

New York. 

New Jersey. 

Pennsylvania. 

East North Central: 

Ohio. 

Indiana. 

Illinois. 

Michigan.. 

Wisconsin. 

West North Central: 

Minnesota. 

Iowa. 

Missouri. 

North Dakota. 

South Dakota. 

Nebraska. 

Kansas. 

South Atlantic: 

Delaware. 

Maryland. 

District of Columbia, 

Virginia. 

West Virginia. 

North Carolina. 

South Carolina. 

Georgia. 

Florida. 

East South Central: 

Kentucky. 

Tennessee. 

Alabama. 

Mississippi. 

West South Central: 

Arkansas. 

Louisiana. 

Oklahoma. 

Texas. 

Mountain: 

Montana. 

Idaho. 

Wyoming. 

Colorado. 

New Mexico. 

Arizona. 

Utah. 

Nevada. 

Pacific: 

Washington. 

Oregon. 

California. 


CHILDREN IN INSTITUTIONS AT CLOSE OF THE YEAR. 


Total 
number 
of in¬ 
stitutions 
reported. 

Total 
number 
of in¬ 
stitutions 
reporting 
children 
at close 
of the 
year. 


Total. 1 

Orphans, half¬ 
orphans, and 
foundlings. 

Newsboys or other 
working boys 
and girls. 

Defectives or 
invalids. 

Delinquent, way¬ 
ward, or truant 
children. 

Other homeless, 
neglected, or indi¬ 
gent children. 

Number 
of in¬ 
stitutions 
reporting. 

Number 

of 

children 

reported. 

Number 
of in¬ 
stitutions 
reporting. 

Number 

of 

children 

reported. 

Number 
of in¬ 
stitutions 
reporting. 

Number 

of 

children 

reported. 

Number 
of in¬ 
stitutions 
reporting. 

Number 

of 

children 

reported. 

Number 
of in¬ 
stitutions 
reporting. 

Number 

of 

children 

reported. 

1,151 

1,077 

108,070 

915 

72,925 

30 

1,139 

147 

1,181 

129 

3,404 

561 

26,611 

118 

no 

9,023 

93 

5,671 



9 

172 

11 

168 

73 

2,956 

309 

291 

44,963 

241 

29,275 

13 

459 

38 

574 

36 

1,794 

168 

12,345 

260 

248 

20,153 

205 

13,197 

6 

433 

35 

251 

35 

581 

144 

4,832 

95 

93 

7,721 

76 

5,052 

2 

29 

21 

52 

11 

121 

41 

2,066 

152 

139 

10,107 

126 

8,019 

4 

48 

14 

37 

10 

132 

42 

1,369 

55 

50 

2,979 

45 

2,502 



3 

7 

1 

1 

17 

401 

58 

53 

4 ,136 

49 

3,299 

2 

123 

14 

40 

5 

149 

16 

499 

28 

24 

2,166 

19 

1.337 

1 

18 

5 

11 

4 

44 

13 

374 

76 

69 

6,822 

61 

4,573 

2 

29 

8 

37 

16 

414 

47 

1,769 

12 

11 

853 

10 

774 



1 

2 

2 

4 

5 

58 

17 

17 

1,125 

16 

891 



1 

4 

3 

11 

12 

219 

4 

2 

’ 113 

2 

73 







2 

40 

49 

48 

4,069 

41 

2,571 



5 

58 

5 

125 

29 

1,274 

13 

11 

913 

10 

669 







6 

244 

23 

21 

1,950 

14 

693 



2 

108 

1 

28 

19 

1,121 

154 

144 

30,247 

116 

17,886 

7 

339 

16 

334 

17 

1,394 

98 

9,900 

50 

45 

3,365 

35 

2,310 

1 

32 

8 

49 

5 

194 

27 

658 

105 

102 

11,351 

90 

9,079 

5 

88 

14 

191 

14 

206 

43 

1,787 

106 

100 

8,479 

82 

5,481 

2 

49 

10 

196 

11 

116 

61 

2.074 

47 

44 

2,600 

37 

1,626 



11 

24 

7 

187 

24 

656 

64 

63 

5,603 

49 

4,002 

2 

381 

5 

12 

8 

100 

29 

981 

24 

23 

1,868 

20 

1,043 

1 

2 

7 

13 

6 

163 

18 

647 

19 

18 

1,603 

17 

1,045 

1 

1 

2 

6 

3 

15 

12 

474 

16 

16 

1,569 


1,284 



7 

17 

6 

67 

5 

201 

18 

18 

1,667 

12 

750 

1 

17 

1 

3 



13 

862 

32 

31 

2,865 

24 

1,901 

1 

12 

4 

10 

3 

44 

8 

613 

2 

2 

121 

2 

112 



2 

3 



1 

6 

2 

2 

78 

1 

53 



1 

1 



2 

24 

9 

9 

646 

8 

423 



1 




5 

135 

16 

15 

775 

14 

529 



5 

11 

2 

10 

7 

225 

5 

5 

309 

4 

214 



1 

1 



2 

24 

36 

33 

2,493 

29 

1,459 



2 

5 

4 

41 

15 

868 

14 

14 

L063 

11 

840 

1 

22 

2 

5 

2 

50 

6 

146 

32 

27 

1,243 

27 

1,131 



3 

4 



9 

108 

9 

8 

'407 

7 

351 



2 

7 

1 

i 



17 

16 

1,698 

15 

1,582 

1 

11 

1 

2 



4 

103 

10 

10 

1,270 

10 

1,220 

1 

10 

1 

3 

1 

32 

1 

5 

22 

20 

1,431 

18 

1,068 



1 

9 

2 

8 

5 

115 

7 

6 

193 

5 

154 

1 

5 

1 

1 





25 

21 

930 

18 

620 



1 

1 

1 

1 

10 

285 

15 

14 

813 

12 

726 



1 

3 



4 

39 

8 

8 

603 

8 

523 



1 

3 



3 

77 

7 

7 

633 

7 

633 









r 9 

7 

243 

6 

143 







2 

75 

24 

24 

2,534 

22 

1,935 

2 

123 

9 

27 

4 

148 

10 

301 

5 

4 

95 

4 

94 









20 

18 

1,264 

17 

1,127 



5 

13 

1 

1 

4 

123 

3 

2 

224 

2 

174 



i 

1 



i 

49 

2 

2 

57 

2 

18 

1 

18 

2 

5 

2 

11 

i 

5 

1 

1 

13 

1 

4 







i 

9 

14 

12 

1.329 

8 

699 



2 

5 

1 

1 

7 

242 

2 

2 

148 

2 

120 







1 

28 

2 

1 

41 

1 

26 







1 

15 

3 

3 

263 

2 

231 





1 

32 



1 

1 

91 

1 

65 







1 

26 

14 

10 

639 

8 

456 





2 

77 

5 

106 

6 

6 

563 

4 

346 



2 

3 



4 

214 

56 

53 

5,620 

49 

3,771 

2 

29 

6 

34 

14 

337 

38 

1.449 


1 Includes those not classified. 


Incomplete and unsatisfactory as this table is, it 
marks an advance in the recognition of the necessity 


for careful study of conditions, and it is hoped that 
future reports will show a much better record. 






















































































































































INSTITUTIONS FOR THE CARE OF CHILDREN 


33 


The following table, classifying the children received 
into institutions according to the agencies through 
which they were received, is indicative of those agencies 
rather than exact in its specification of them. The 
term “Public official” includes municipal, township, 
county, or state officers; the “Agents of institutions” 


are the representatives of the institutions themselves. 
It is manifestly not always easy to distinguish between 
these different agencies, and the figures given can not 
be considered complete or exact, but they are of in¬ 
terest, especially those showing the number of children 
brought to institutions by relatives or friends. 


CHILDREN RECEIVED INTO INSTITUTIONS FOR THE CARE OF CHILDREN, CLASSIFIED ACCORDING TO AGENCY 

THROUGH WHICH RECEIVED, FOR DIVISIONS AND STATES: 1910. 


Table 25 

DIVISION OB STATE. 

Total 
number 
of insti¬ 
tutions 
reported. 

Total 
number 
of insti¬ 
tutions 
reporting 
children 
received. 

CHILDREN RECEIVED. 

Total. I 

Classified according to agency through which received. 

Public officials. 

Agents of 
institutions. 

Child-placing 

societies. 

Relatives. 

Other agencies. 

Number 
of insti¬ 
tutions 
reporting. 

Number 

of 

children 

reported. 

Number 
of insti¬ 
tutions 
reporting. 

Number 

of 

children 

reported. 

Number 
of insti¬ 
tutions 
reporting. 

Number 

of 

children 

reported. 

Number 
of insti¬ 
tutions 
reporting. 

Number 

of 

children 

reported. 

Number 
of insti¬ 
tutions 
reporting. 

Number 

of 

children 

reported. 

United States. 

1,151 

1,065 

85,829 

514 

29,756 

164 

7,407 

96 

1,291 

817 

33,712 

202 

10,035 

Geographic divisions: 














New England. 

118 

112 

8,066 

■*4 

922 

16 

444 

9 

116 

87 

5,045 

19 

391 

Middle Atlantic. 

309 

2S7 

35,873 

155 

14,893 

43 

3,825 

35 

262 

236 

9,673 

61 

6,801 

East North Central. 

260 

246 

18,712 

148 

8,196 

33 

1,442 

18 

601 

155 

6,394 

40 

1,084 

West North Central. 

95 

90 

7,581 

41 

1,765 

19 

499 

9 

111 

75 

4,507 

13 

699 

South Atlantic. 

152 

138 

3,883 

39 

460 

25 

474 

13 

97 

109 

2,420 

26 

293 

East South Central. 

55 

47 

1,456 

15 

321 

12 

181 

2 

4 

34 

675 

8 

66 

West South Central. 

58 

49 

2,360 

16 

506 

4 

54 

2 

15 

42 

1,365 

9 

281 

Mountain. 

28 

27 

2,589 

14 

824 

4 

230 

1 

9 

20 

1,149 

4 

42 

Pacific. 

76 

69 

5,309 

42 

1,869 

8 

258 

7 

76 

59 

2,484 

22 

378 

New England: 














Maine. 

12 

12 

208 

5 

53 

2 

9 

1 

1 

8 

139 

1 

6 


17 

17 

625 

11 

125 

2 

12 



15 

453 

2 

35 


4 

2 

58 

1 

1 





2 

57 



Massachusetts. 

49 

48 

5,632 

12 

163 

7 

278 

7 

113 

40 

3,866 

12 

257 


13 

11 

724 

3 

115 

4 

140 



8 

276 



Connecticut. 

23 

22 

819 

12 

465 

1 

5 

1 

2 

14 

254 

4 

93 

Middle Atlantic: 














New York. 

154 

143 

26,465 

106 

13,167 

15 

3,223 

9 

76 

117 

4,333 

27 

5,319 

New Jersey. 

50 

43 

5,131 

11 

1,153 

11 

199 

8 

70 

35 

2,987 

4 

718 

Pennsylvania. 

105 

101 

4,277 

38 

573 

17 

403 

18 

116 

84 

2,353 

30 

764 

East North Central: 














Ohio. 

106 

102 

6,995 

69 

1,967 

8 

386 

3 

36 

57 

2,998 

19 

838 

Indiana. 

47 

45 

1,277 

26 

739 

7 

186 

1 

1 

19 

271 

5 

55 

Illinois. 

64 

58 

7,348 

32 

4,444 

12 

844 

7 

310 

44 

1,627 

7 

123 

Michigan. 

24 

24 

1,951 

12 

558 

5 

25 

4 

246 

20 

897 

5 

25 

W isconsin. 

19 

17 

1,141 

9 

488 

1 

1 

3 

8 

15 

601 

4 

43 

West North Central: 





• 










16 

16 

1 194 

10 

405 

2 

23 



12 

766 



Iowa. 

18 

17 

l’, 182 

9 

328 

4 

101 

3 

19 

16 

704 

1 

30 

Missouri. 

32 

29 

3,677 

11 

705 

7 

268 

4 

90 

24 

1,984 

9 

630 


2 

1 

65 

1 

3 





1 

62 




2 

2 

106 



1 

50 



2 

51 

1 

5 

Nebraska. 

9 

9 

642 

4 

182 

3 

52 

2 

2 

6 

372 

2 

34 


16 

16 

715 

6 

142 

2 

5 



14 

568 



South Atlantic: 














Delaware. 

5 

5 

92 

2 

9 

1 

12 

2 

16 

3 

49 

2 

6 

Maryland. 

36 

35 

1,310 

10 

167 

8 

113 

8 

70 

27 

875 

8 

66 


14 

14 

503 

7 

191 





9 

215 

5 

97 

Virginia. 

32 

27 

309 

4 

6 

3 

11 

1 

8 

23 

263 

3 

21 


9 

8 

349 

1 

5 

2 

208 



6 

136 




17 

14 

388 

5 

26 

3 

39 



12 

279 

5 

44 


10 

10 

232 

2 

15 

3 

34 



9 

183 



Georgia. 

22 

21 

604 

6 

23 

4 

54 

2 

3 

16 

345 

3 

59 


7 

4 

96 

2 

18 

1 

3 



4 

75 



East South Central: 















25 

20 

526 

8 

211 

7 

153 



13 

156 

4 

6 


15 

13 

595 

4 

103 

3 

20 



8 

240 

2 

23 

Alabama. 

8 

8 

198 

3 

7 

2 

8 

1 

2 

7 

144 

2 

37 


7 

6 

137 





1 

2 

6 

135 

















West South Central: 















9 

6 

179 

2 

6 

2 

33 



5 

140 




24 

21 

1,352 

10 

484 



1 

2 

18 

659 

6 

107 


5 

4 

102 

2 

2 

1 

6 



4 

94 



Texas. 

20 

18 

727 

2 

14 

1 

15 

1 

13 

15 

472 

3 

174 

Moltntain : 















3 

3 

207 

2 

79 

1 

40 



2 

85 

1 

3 


2 

2 

249 

2 

60 

1 

167 



2 

22 




1 

1 

13 

1 

4 





1 

9 



Colorado. 

14 

13 

1,724 

7 

665 

2 

23 

1 

9 

8 

653 

3 

39 


2 

2 

74 

1 

3 





2 

71 




2 

2 

83 







2 

83 




3 

3 

226 







3 

226 




1 

1 

13 

1 

13 









Pacific: 

14 

i 

1,069 

7 

625 





8 

414 

4 

30 


6 

5 

414 

4 

100 

2 

75 



4 

133 



California. 

56 

53 

3,826 

31 

1,144 

6 

183 

7 

76 

47 

1,937 

18 

348 


i Includes those not classified. 


44153°—14-3 
























































































































































34 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 


Class II.—SOCIETIES FOR THE PROTECTION AND CARE OF CHILDREN. 


The organizations covered oy this classification 
include societies for the prevention of cruelty to chil¬ 
dren, humane societies, children’s aid societies, chil¬ 
dren’s friend societies, and home-finding societies, 
and, in brief, any organizations which receive children 
under their care for the special purpose of finding 
homes for them, and which place them in such homes, 
by boarding, adoption, or indenture. In the strict 
sense of the term, these organizations can scarcely be 
called institutions, yet their work is frequently so 
thoroughly institutional in character, so closely allied 
to that carried on by many orphanages, homes, etc., 
that to omit them from this report would eliminate 
from it a most important element. It was therefore 
decided to obtain statistics for societies as a separate 
class, but to limit the number included to those which 
actually receive children under their care. A con¬ 
siderable number of such societies, especially of 
humane societies, confine their efforts to the prosecu¬ 
tion, in the courts, of cases of cruelty to children, 
while some are simply agencies for child-protection, 
but are not in any sense responsible for the subsequent 
well-being of the children; all societies of this char¬ 
acter are excluded. 

INFORMATION FURNISHED. 

The facts shown by the tabulation are the number 
of paid and voluntary agents in service, the number 
of receiving or temporary homes under the control 
of the society, the number of families in which children 
were placed during the year, the number of children 
so placed, and the number under the care of the 
society at the close of the year. In addition to these 
data regarding the organization and work of the 
society, its receipts, expenditures, and property valua¬ 
tion are shown. The children placed during the year 
are classified according to their location in families or 
in institutions, being grouped in each case under the 
same general heads as the children in institutions of 
Class I. Those under the care of the society at the 
close of the year are classified as in the receiving or 
temporary homes, in families, with or without pay¬ 
ment of board, and in custody elsewhere. 

The receiving or temporary homes under the care 
of the societies, together with their inmates, are also 
included in Class I, which fact should be noted in any 
consideration of the figures for the total number of 
children in various classes of institutions. The infor¬ 
mation obtained in regard to the societies covered, 
together with their local addresses, is presented in 
detail, by states, on pages 158 to 173. Table 28 
summarizes the more important figures. 

From this table it appears that the majority of these 
societies are found in the Middle Atlantic and East 
North Central divisions. Among the states Indiana 
leads with 33, and is followed by New York with 28, 
Pennsylvania with 25, Ohio with 16, New Jersey with 


12, and Massachusetts with 10. Vermont in New 
England, Georgia, Mississippi, and Louisiana in the 
South, and Arizona, Nevada, Utah, and Wyoming in 
the West, reported no organizations of this type. 

A noticeable feature of these societies is the extent 
to which they employ voluntary agencies. Of the 205 
organizations enumerated only 163 reported agents, 
the inference as to the other 42 being that the regular 
officers of the societies carried on whatever business 
might be necessary in caring for the children. Those 
societies which employed agents reported a total of 
3,135, of whom 977 were paid, and 2,158 served with¬ 
out compensation. It is noteworthy that voluntary 
service is practically confined to the eastern states 
(including the East North Central division), Missouri 
being the only southern state, and California and Colo¬ 
rado the only western states reporting an appreciable 
amount of voluntary work. Of the paid agents a 
majority are women, while of the voluntary agents 
the overwhelming majority are men. 

As already intimated, there are two quite distinct 
departments of work conducted by these societies: 
protection of children, through the courts, from cruel 
treatment or from evil influences; and provision for 
their care. As this report is necessarily limited to 
children who come directly under the care of the 
societies, those organizations which confine their 
activities to the first-named department are excluded, 
while for those whose work includes both protection 
and home finding only the last-named branch is pre¬ 
sented in these tables. 

The children cared for are tabulated under two 
heads, “Children placed during the year” and “Chil¬ 
dren under care of societies at the close of the year.” 
The first head is subdivided so as to show children 
placed during the year in families and in institutions, 
respectively; the second shows the number at the 
close of the year in receiving homes controlled by soci¬ 
eties, and those under their supervision in families, 
other institutions, or elsewhere. 

In this connection an explanation of the terms used 
in these tables in regard to the placing or care of chil¬ 
dren will assist in interpreting their significance. A 
child is placed in a family, by assignment by the soci¬ 
ety, with or without payment of board; by adoption 
into the family; or by indenture. The term “insti¬ 
tution” is applied to an orphanage, children’s home, 
or other home that receives children as inmates; and 
the institution is usually one that is recognized by the 
court or by the state board of charities as providing 
proper care for the child. A child is placed in such an 
institution when it is committed to its care with 
approval of the court or state board of charities, or is 
temporarily intrusted to it by the society, pending 
further disposition. A receiving home under the 
control of the society, and in which children are pro¬ 
vided for temporarily, is not included under this 
definition. 



SOCIETIES FOR THE PROTECTION AND CARE OF CHILDREN. 


35 


CHILDREN PLACED. 

The following table gives, by states, the total num¬ 
ber of children placed by the societies with families 
and institutions, respectively: 


state authority of supervision over benevolent insti¬ 
tutions has resulted in requiring child-placing and 
home-finding societies to continue their guardianship 
and supervision over children placed by them until it 
is clear that the right home has been found. 


Table 26 



Total. 

In fami¬ 
lies. 

United States . 

25,288 

14,019 


New York. 

8 566 

2,389 
2,428 
1,329 
980 
610 
287 
295 
627 
313 
542 
340 
530 
178 

Pennsylvania. 

3^ 106 

1 484 

Massachusetts. 

New Jersey. 

1,327 

896 

Indiana..'. 

California. 

776 

Ohio. 

772 

Illinois. 

653 

Michigan.-. 

652 

Iowa. 

557 

Maryland. 

545 

Washington. 

536 

469 

Minnesota. 

Oregon. 

421 

383 

270 

295 

4 

Wisconsin. 

412 

Missouri. 

393 

Colorado. 

368 

Maine. 

357 

335 

24 

District of Columbia. 

320 

Kansas. 

294 

290 

Texas. 

282 

196 

Virginia. 

244 

223 

Connecticut. 

233 

114 

Alabama. 

202 

37 

Delaware. 

170 

34 

Tennessee. 

144 

19 

South Dakota. 

139 

138 

Idaho.. 

125 

121 

Rhode Island. 

122 

27 

Oklahoma. 

97 

97 

North Carolina. 

95 

93 

Florida. 

87 

87 

New Hampshire. 

81 

23 

West Virginia. 

72 

71 

Montana. 

66 

66 

North Dakota. 

62 

61 

New Mexico. 

50 

50 

Arkansas. 

46 

46 

Nebraska. 

39 

39 

South Carolina. 

28 

28 



CHILDREN PLACED BY SOCIETIES 
FOR THE PROTECTION AND 
CARE OF CHILDREN: 1910. 


tutions. 


11,269 


6,177 

678 

155 

347 

286 

489 

477 

26 

339 

15 

205 

6 

291 

38 

142 

98 

364 

22 

296 

4 

86 

21 

119 

165 

136 

125 

1 

4 

95 


From this table it appears that New York placed 
6,177 children (72.1 per cent of the total reported for 
that state) in institutions and only 2,389 (27.9 per 
cent) in families; Massachusetts placed 89.6 per cent 
in families and only 10.4 per cent in institutions; and 
Washington placed all but 6 of 536 children in families, 
while Colorado placed all but 4 out of 368 children in 
institutions. The explanation of this marked differ¬ 
ence between certain states is found chiefly in the 
type of society that conducts the principal amount of 
child-placing work in the particular state. In general, 
societies originally or primarily protective in their 
character place the majority of children in institu¬ 
tions, while the children’s aid societies, home-finding 
societies, and those of that type place the majority 
of their children in families. Thus, out of the total 
number reported from New York 6,046 were reported 
by 3 societies, the New York and Brooklyn Societies 
for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children, and the 
Mohawk and Hudson Humane Society, all three organ¬ 
izations being primarily protective rather than home 
finding in their character; in Massachusetts almost all 
were reported by children s aid societies and similar 
organizations; while in Colorado, two humane socie¬ 
ties, and in Washington a children’s home society, 
were the only ones reported. 

As in the case of institutions for the care of children 
(Class I), so with these societies the assumption by 


RECEIVING HOMES. 

Another development has been the establishment 
by a number of societies of receiving homes, where 
children who come under their care, but for whom as 
yet no appropriate family or institution has been found, 
may be temporarily placed, or to which they may be 
returned should the experiment of family placing in 
any instance prove a failure. Some home-finding 
societies, instead of establishing such a home, make 
arrangements with some neighboring orphanage or 
home, but the tendency is to have separate homes for 
the care of these children. 

The following table gives the distribution by states, 
of the total number of children reported by such socie¬ 
ties as under their care at the close of the year, accord¬ 
ing to their location in family homes, receiving homes, 
or elsewhere. This last column covers a great variety 
of arrangements, some of the children included being 
in institutions where they are kept tentatively, some 
in places where they are held on indenture, and some 
being self-supporting, but still under supervision. 


Table 27 


CHILDREN UNDER CARE OF SOCIETIES FOR 
PROTECTION AND CARE OF CHILDREN AT 
THE CLOSE OF THE YEAR: 1910. 



Total. 

In fami¬ 
lies. 

In receiv¬ 
ing 

homes. 

Else¬ 

where. 

United States . 

32,776 

20,989 

3,562 

8,081 

Pennsylvania. 

7,515 

4,062 

166 

3,2?7 

New York. 

4,971 

2,734 

2,115 

122 

New Jersey. 

13,629 

2,412 

182 

1,006 

Illinois. 

1,918 

1,479 

80 

359 

District of Columbia. 

1,652 

1 062 


590 

Michigan. 

•1,611 

612 

152 

847 

Indiana. 

1,260 

735 

288 

237 

Massachusetts. 

1,195 

1,088 

33 

74 

Washington. 

1,152 

1,050 

35 

67 

Kansas. 

907 

907 



California. 

881 

651 

50 

180 

Maryland. 

809 

756 


53 

Oregon. 

636 

558 

58 

20 

Rhode Island. 

611 

192 

8 

411 

Virginia. 

565 

526 

31 

8 

West Virginia. 

557 

300 

25 

232 

Ohio. 

488 

356 

67 

65 

Wisconsin. 

i 402 

330 

45 

21 

North Dakota. 

360 

341 

19 


Missouri. 

258 

207 

32 

19 

Connecticut. 

254 

145 


109 

Maine. 

219 

198 


21 

New Mexico. 

178 


10 

168 

Minnesota. 

159 

132 

5 

22 

Tennessee. 

121 

19 


102 

Florida. 

109 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

South Carolina. 

75 

71 


4 

Idaho. 

52 

8 

44 


Iowa. 

52 


49 

3 


41 

37 


4 

New Hampshire. 

41 

6 


35 

Texas. 

35 

1 

34 



26 

11 

15 



19 


19 


Arkansas. 

9 



9 


3 



3 

Nebraska. 

3 

3 



North Carolina. 

3 



3 







i Includes those whose location was not reported. 2 Not reported. 


A comparison of this table with the preceding one 
makes it evident that the societies of some states con¬ 
tinue their supervision over children under their care 
longer than do those of other states. 









































































































































1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 

9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 

21 

22 

23 

24 

25 

26 

27 

28 

29 

30 

31 

32 

33 

34 

35 

36 

37 

38 

39 

40 

41 

42 

43 

44 

45 

46 

47 

48 

49 

SO 

51 

52 

53 

54 

55 

56 

57 

58 

59 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

GENERAL SUMMARY OF STATISTICS FOR SOCIETIES FOR THE 


AGENTS IN SERVICE OF SOCIETIES AT CLOSE OF THE YEAR. 


CHILDREN PLACED DURING THE YEAR. 


Total 
num¬ 
ber of 
socie¬ 
ties re¬ 
ported. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
socie¬ 
ties re¬ 
port¬ 
ing 

agents. 

Total 
num¬ 
ber of 
agents 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ed. 

Paid. 

Voluntary. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
socie¬ 
ties 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Total 
num¬ 
ber re¬ 
port¬ 
ed. 1 

With sex 
reported. 

In families. 

In institutions. 

Total. 1 

With sex 
reported. 

Total. 1 

With sex 
reported. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 1 

W ith sex 
reported. 

Total. 1 

With sex 
reported. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

205 

163 

3,135 

977 

410 

567 

2,158 

1,874 

274 

198 

25,288 

12,545 

8,606 

14,019 

6,511 

5,424 

11,269 

6,034 

3,182 

18 

18 

477 

77 

20 

57 

400 

333 

67 

18 

2,277 

1,102 

1,175 

1,828 

876 

952 

449 

226 

223 

65 

53 

850 

513 

179 

334 

337 

214 

113 

63 

12,999 

7,032 

3,316 

5, 797 

2,561 

1,499 

7,202 

4,471 

1,817 

63 

39 

291 

143 

67 

76 

148 

87 

61 

63 

3,385 

1,504 

1,454 

2,115 

1,021 

1,006 

1,270 

483 

448 

20 

20 

98 

78 

46 

32 

20 

18 

2 

20 

1,953 

954 

999 

1,543 

760 

783 

410 

194 

216 

10 

10 

58 

58 

19 

39 




10 

1,561 

808 

666 

900 

424 

389 

661 

384 

277 

6 

4 

9 

7 

6 

1 

2 

2 


4 

'346 

264 

82 

56 

45 

11 

290 

219 

71 

9 

7 

56 

55 

46 

9 

1 

1 


8 

425 

113 

147 

339 

84 

90 

86 

29 

57 

5 

5 

1,145 

20 

14 

6 

1,125 

1,106 

19 

5 

609 

140 

133 

241 

123 

118 

368 

17 

15 

9 

7 

151 

26 

13 

13 

125 

113 

12 

7 

1,733 

628 

634 

1,200 

617 

576 

533 

11 

58 

2 

2 

2 

1 


1 

1 


1 

2 

357 

204 

153 

335 

193 

142 

22 

11 

11 

3 

3 

6 

2 

1 

1 

4 

3 

1 

3 

81 

28 

53 

23 

7 

16 

58 

21 

37 

10 

10 

148 

66 

13 

53 

82 

18 

64 

10 

1,484 

690 

794 

1,329 

610 

719 

155 

80 

75 

1 

1 

5 

4 

4 


1 

1 


1 

122 

53 

69 

27 

4 

23 

95 

49 

46 

2 

2 

316 

4 

2 

2 

312 

311 

1 

2 

233 

127 

106 

114 

62 

52 

119 

65 

54 

28 

27 

567 

376 

131 

245 

191 

169 

22 

27 

8,566 

5,695 

2,257 

2,389 

1,560 

721 

6,177 

4,135 

1,536 

12 

12 

87 

43 

18 

25 

44 

33 

11 

11 

1,327 

584 

504 

980 

389 

354 

347 

195 

150 

25 

14 

196 

94 

30 

64 

102 

12 

80 

25 

3,106 

753 

555 

2,428 

612 

424 

678 

141 

131 

16 

16 

140 

34 

27 

7 

106 

65 

41 

16 

772 

179 

166 

295 

111 

96 

477 

68 

70 

33 

10 

17 

14 

8 

6 

3 

2 

1 

33 

896 

448 

448 

610 

299 

311 

286 

149 

137 

5 

5 

87 

56 

19 

37 

31 

16 

15 

5 

653 

320 

333 

627 

313 

314 

26 

7 

19 

3 

2 

14 

14 

1 

13 




3 

652 

327 

325 

313 

166 

147 

339 

161 

178 

6 

6 

33 

25 

12 

13 

8 

4 

4 

6 

412 

230 

182 

270 

132 

138 

142 

98 

44 

7 

7 

34 

18 

11 

7 

16 

15 

1 

7 

469 

220 

249 

178 

95 

83 

291 

125 

166 

2 

2 

13 

13 

7 

6 




2 

557 

271 

286 

542 

263 

279 

15 

8 

7 

5 

5 

20 

16 

14 

2 

4 

3 

1 

5 

393 

212 

181 

295 

153 

142 

98 

59 

39 

1 

1 

9 

9 

2 

7 




1 

62 

35 

27 

61 

35 

26 

1 


1 

1 

1 

3 

3 

1 

2 




1 

139 

63 

76 

138 

62 

76 

1 

1 


1 

1 

8 

8 

3 

5 




1 

39 

14 

25 

39 

14 

25 




3 

3 

11 

11 

8 

3 




3 

294 

139 

155 

290 

138 

152 

4 

1 

3 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 





1 

170 

82 

88 

34 

13 

21 

136 

69 

67 

2 

2 

19 

19 

3 

16 




2 

545 

305 

240 

340 

192 

148 

205 

113 

92 

1 

1 

10 

10 

5 

5 




1 

320 

208 

112 

24 

9 

15 

296 

199 

97 

2 

2 

12 

12 

3 

9 




2 

244 

105 

139 

223 

103 

120 

21 

2 

19 

1 

1 

8 

8 

2 

6 




1 

72 

48 

24 

71 

47 

24 

i 

i 

1 

1 

4 

4 

2 

2 




1 

95 

44 

51 

93 

44 

49 

2 


2 

1 

1 

3 

3 

2 

i 




1 

28 

16 

12 

28 

16 

12 























1 

1 

1 

1 

1 





1 

87 



87 






2 



















2 

2 

4 

3 

3 


1 

1 


2 

144 

101 

43 

i9 

12 

7 

125 

89 

36 

2 

2 

5 

4 

3 

i 

1 

1 


2 

202 

163 

39 

37 

33 

4 

165 

130 

35 

1 

1 

41 

41 

40 

i 




1 

46 

22 

24 

46 

22 

24 























2 

2 

4 

4 

2 

2 




2 

97 

51 

46 

97 

51 

46 




6 

4 

11 

10 

4 

6 

1 

1 


5 

282 

40 

77 

196 

11 

20 

86 

29 

57 

1 

1 

4 

4 

3 

1 




1 

66 

29 

37 

66 

29 

37 




1 

1 

5 

5 

2 

3 




1 

125 

69 

56 

121 

69 

52 

4 


4 

2 

2 

3 1,132 

7 

7 


3 1,125 

31,106 

19 

2 

368 

19 

13 

4 

2 

2 

364 

17 

11 

1 

1 

4 

4 

2 

2 




1 

50 

23 

27 

50 

23 

27 





























































1 

1 

11 

11 

8 

3 




1 

536 

278 

258 

530 

274 

256 

6 

4 

2 

1 

1 

3 

3 

1 

2 




1 

421 

207 

214 

383 

207 

176 

38 


38 

7 

5 

137 

12 

4 

8 

125 

113 

12 

5 

776 

143 

162 

287 

136 

144 

489 

7 

18 

1 


i Includes those whose sex was not reported. 


1 Not reported. 























































































































































































SOCIETIES FOR THE PROTECTION AND CARE OF CHILDREN 

PROTECTION AND CARE OF CHILDREN, BY DIVISIONS AND STATES: 1910. 


37 




CHILDREN UNDER CARE 

OF SOCIETIES 

AT CLOSE OF THE TEAR. 



RECEIPTS DURING 
THE YEAR. 

PAYMENTS DURING 
THE YEAR. 

VALUE OF 
PROPERTY 

AT CLOSE 

OF THE YEAR. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
socie¬ 
ties re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Total 

number 

reported . 1 

W ith sex 
reported. 

In families. 

In receiving homes. 

Elsewhere. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
socie¬ 
ties re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Amount 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
socie¬ 
ties re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Amount 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
socie¬ 
ties re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Amount 

reported. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total . 1 

W ith sex 
reported. 

Total . 1 

With sex 
reported. 

Total . 1 

With sex 
reported. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

148 

32,776 

15,038 

12,086 

20,989 

9,665 

8,149 

3,562 

2,141 

1,225 

8,081 

3,016 

2,481 

165 

$2,102,892 

163 

$2,009,081 

81 

$6,727,107 

14 

2,320 

1,081 

1,239 

1,629 

764 

865 

41 

20 

21 

650 

297 

353 

16 

308,549 

16 

230,403 

14 

1,939,878 

51 

16,115 

6,759 

4,741 

9,208 

4,138 

2,955 

2,463 

1,541 

797 

4,415 

1,077 

988 

49 

974,734 

49 

974,582 

26 

3,689,893 

42 

5,679 

3,013 

2,611 

3,512 

1,803 

1,709 

632 

371 

261 

1,529 

835 

639 

45 

252,015 

43 

235,236 

14 

257,186 

16 

1,758 

420 

512 

1,590 

316 

448 

124 

76 

48 

44 

28 

16 

20 

178,599 

20 

180,486 

10 

336,570 

9 

3,770 

2,151 

1,510 

2,715 

1,558 

1,157 

56 

21 

35 

890 

572 

318 

10 

138,193 

10 

130,712 

7 

162,100 

3 

162 

121 

41 

56 

45 

11 




106 

76 

30 

4 

9 564 

4 

8,414 

1 

1,248 

5 

70 

15 

8 

12 

9 

2 

49 

1 

2 

9 

5 

4 

8 

19,128 

8 

20,586 

2 

23;006 

3 

233 

132 

101 

8 

7 

1 

54 

34 

20 

171 

91 

80 

5 

85,751 

5 

84,358 

4 

103,550 

5. 

2,669 

1,346 

1,323 

2,259 

1,025 

1,001 

143 

77 

41 

267 

35 

53 

8 

136,359 

8 

144,304 

3 

213,682 

1 

219 

131 

88 

198 

119 

79 




21 

12 

9 

2 

4,405 

2 

4,334 

1 

175 

2 

41 

16 

25 

6 

4 

2 




35 

12 

23 

i 

1,421 

1 

1 ,436 

2 

4,046 

9 

1,195 

542 

653 

1,088 

505 

583 

33 

17 

16 

74 

20 

54 

10 

240,313 

10 

171,328 

8 

1,660,951 

1 

611 

274 

337 

192 

68 

124 

8 

3 

5 

411 

203 

208 

1 

17,149 

1 

9,499 

1 

77,100 

1 

254 

118 

136 

145 

68 

77 




109 

50 

59 

2 

45,201 

2 

43,806 

2 

197,606 

17 

4,971 

2,958 

1,963 

2,734 

1,503 

1,231 

2,115 

1,381 

684 

122 

74 

48 

23 

635,592 

23 

641,584 

14 

3,150,761 

11 

3,629 

2,089 

1,418 

2,412 

1,447 

943 

182 

58 

49 

1,006 

' 581 

425 

10 

101,517 

11 

106,368 

4 

93,141 

23 

7,515 

1,712 

1,360 

4,062 

1,188 

781 

166 

102 

64 

3,287 

422 

515 

16 

237,625 

15 

226,630 

8 

445,991 

12 

488 

238 

195 

356 

195 

161 

67 

39 

28 

65 

4 

6 

14 

45,088 

13 

35,384 

3 

50,952 

17 

1,260 

661 

599 

735 

378 

357 

288 

178 

110 

237 

105 

132 

17 

39,458 

16 

36,498 

2 

36,000 

5 

1,918 

1,013 

905 

1,479 

775 

704 

80 

53 

27 

359 

185 

174 

5 

99,969 

5 

96,535 

4 

119,980 

3 

1,611 

884 

727 

612 

279 

333 

152 

78 

74 

847 

527 

320 

3 

33,293 

3 

34,982 

3 

34,000 

5 

'402 

217 

185 

330 

176 

154 

45 

23 

22 

21 

14 

7 

6 

34,207 

6 

31,837 

2 

16,254 

4 

159 

92 

67 

132 

72 

60 

5 

4 

1 

22 

16 

6 

7 

36,461 

7 , 

35,617 

3 

83,480 

2 

52 

35 

17 




49 

33 

16 

3 

2 

1 

2 

47,733 

2 

47,186 

2 

97,000 

4 

258 

128 

130 

207 

101 

106 

32 

17 

15 

19 

10 

9 

5 

33,586 

5 

32;385 

2 

7o;ooo 

1 

360 

117 

243 

341 

105 

236 

19 

12 

7 




1 

14,544 

1 

16,295 

1 

26,790 

1 

19 

10 

9 




19 

10 

9 




1 

14' 152 

1 

16; 714 

1 

55 ; 000 

1 

3 


3 

3 


3 







1 

10,326 

1 

9,835 


3 

907 

38 

43 

907 

38 

43 







3 

21,797 

3 

22; 454 

1 

4,300 












1 

1,158 

1 

1,429 


2 

£09 

498 

311 

756 

478 

278 




53 

20 

33 

2 

21,966 

2 

23;270 

2 

102,775 

1 

1 0^2 

1 001 

591 

1,062 

638 

424 




590 

423 

167 

1 

72,928 

1 

63,911 


2 

'565 

'261 

304 

526 

250 

276 

31 

10 

21 

8 

1 

7 

2 

13;938 

2 

14;572 

2 

20,600 

1 

557 

286 

271 

300 

151 

149 

25 

11 

14 

232 

124 

108 

1 

8,492 

1 

8,586 

1 

35,000 

1 

3 

1 

2 







3 

1 

2 

1 

7,847 

1 

7,232 

1 

2,725 

1 

75 

44 

31 

71 

41 

30 




4 

3 

1 

1 

i , 665 

1 

4; 665 

1 

1,000 

1 

109 

( 2 ) 

m 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 




1 

7,199 

1 

7,047 




121 

87 

34 

19 

12 

7 




102 

75 

27 

2 

2,848 

2 

2,873 



2 

41 

34 

7 

37 

33 

4 




4 

1 

3 

2 

6; 716 

2 

5; 541 

1 

1,248 

l 

9 

5 

4 







9 

5 

4 

1 

3,150 

1 

2,900 





















OR 

9 

2 

11 

9 

2 

15 

(2) 

(2) 




2 

6,132 

2 

6,143 

1 

12,000 



1 

2 

1 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

34 

1 

2 




5 

9', 846 

5 

11,543 

1 

11,000 

l 

3 

1 

2 




3 

1 

2 

1 

13,637 

1 

13,640 

1 

18,000 

1 

52 

31 

21 

8 

7 

1 

44 

24 

20 




1 

49,300 

1 

48,500 

1 

74,400 














2 

4 12,314 

2 

4 11,718 

1 

1,150 

1 

178 

100 

78 




10 

10 


168 

90 

78 

1 

10,500 

1 

10,500 

1 

10,000 







































1 

1,152 

615 

537 

1,050 

553 

497 

35 

27 

8 

67 

35 

32 

1 

31,811 

1 

31,811 

1 

40,400 

1 

'636 

282 

354 

'558 

251 

307 

58 

31 

27 

20 


20 

1 

14,201 

1 

15,871 

1 

133,150 

3 

881 

449 

432 

651 

221 

197 

50 

19 

6 

180 


1 

6 

90,347 

6 

96,622 

1 

40,132 


3 Includes agents for protection of animals. 4 Includes expenditures for protection of animals. 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 

9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

is 

19 

20 

21 

22 

23 

24 

25 

26 

27 

28 

29 

30 

31 

32 

33 

34 

35 

36 

37 

38 

39 

40 

41 

42 

43 

44 

45 

46 

47 

48 

49 

50 

51 

52 

53 

54 

55 

56 

57 

58 

59 









































































































































38 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 


Thus New York, which placed 8,566 children during 
the year, reported only 4,971 as under care at the close 
of the year; but Pennsylvania, which placed 3,106 dur¬ 
ing the year, reported 7,515 as under care at the close of 
the year. Similar contrasts occur elsewhere. The ex¬ 
planation is probably that in New York the societies 
are primarily protective rather than home finding in 
their character, while in Pennsylvania the children’s 
aid societies are more prominent. 

Class III.—HOMES FOR THE CARE OF 

The institutions covered by this classification are 
primarily for adults, and include homes for the per¬ 
manent care of the aged, infirm, or destitute; for the 
temporary shelter of the homeless, the unemployed, 
or wayfarers; for the protection and relief of the un¬ 
fortunate, wayward, or fallen; and for special classes, 
as convalescents, incurables, epileptics, and others. 
Children are received when they accompany their 
parents or when, for any reason, they can not appro¬ 
priately be received into the institutions specially for 
the care of children (Class I), particularly in the case 
of self-supporting, delinquent, or wayward minors. 

In the report for 1904 these institutions were in¬ 
cluded under two separate classifications, (1) “Per¬ 
manent homes for adults, or adults and children” and 
(2) “Temporary homes for adults and children.” In 
the present report, chiefly because of the fact that 
many institutions seemed to belong sometimes to 
both classes, all are included in one class, although 
the distinction between permanent and temporary 


The same contrast appears in the financial reports. 
Only 165 of the 205 societies made any report of their 
finances, and only 81 made any report as to the value 
of property owned. It should, however, be remem¬ 
bered that as the work of the societies in many cases 
is yet in its infancy, and therefore not fully organized, 
future reports will undoubtedly show considerable 
increase along these lines. 

.DULTS, OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN. 

homes is recognized in some of the analytical tables 
which follow. 

In a general way the institutions of this class are 
distributed over the country according to the density 
of the population rather than the area. The geo¬ 
graphic divisions, however, show widely divergent 
ratios between the number of institutions and the 
population. The ratios for the respective divisions 
are as follows: 


New England. One to every 28,740 inhabitants. 

Middle Atlantic. One to every 43,406 inhabitants. 

Pacific. One to every 53,067 inhabitants. 

East North Central. One to every 68,611 inhabitants. 

South Atlantic. One to every 79,187 inhabitants. 

West North Central. One to every 92,364 inhabitants 

Mountain. One to every 125,405 inhabitants 

East South Central. One to every 137,867 inhabitants. 

West South Central. One to every 159,719 inhabitants. 


The information secured in regard to the various 
institutions of this class, together with their local ad¬ 
dresses, is presented by states in the general tables, 
pages 174 to 267. Table 29 summarizes the principal 
statistics by states and geographic divisions. 













HOMES FOR ADULTS, 


OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN. 


39 


GENERAL SUMMARY OF STATISTICS 


FOR HOMES FOR THE CARE 
BY DIVISIONS AND STATES: 


OF ADULTS, OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN, 
1910. 


Table 29 

DIVISION OR STATE. 

Total 
num¬ 
ber 
of in¬ 
stitu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ed. 

INMATES AT CLOSE OF THE YEAR. 

PERSONS RECEIVED DURING 
THE YEAR. 

RECEIPTS 
DURING THE 
YEAR. 

PAYMENTS 
DURING THE 
YEAR. 

VALUE OF 
PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF 

THE YEAR. 

Num¬ 
ber 
of in¬ 
stitu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Total 
num¬ 
ber of 
in¬ 
mates 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ed. 

Adults. 

Children. 

Num¬ 
ber 
of in¬ 
stitu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Total. 1 

With sex 
reported. 

Num¬ 
ber 
of in¬ 
stitu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Amount 

reported. 

1 

i 

Num¬ 
ber 
of in¬ 
stitu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Amount 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber 
of in¬ 
stitu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Amount 

reported. 

To¬ 

tal.! 

W ith sex 
reported. 

To¬ 

tal.! 

W ith sex 
reported. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

United States.. 

1,435 

1,358 

116,228 

98,846 

59,677 

37,849 

17,382 

5,565 

10,361 

1,302 

918,752 

756,691 

140,302 

1,297 

$24,203,197 

1,310 

$23,720,381 

1,238 

$158,318,121 

Geographic divisions: 















1 





New England. 

228 

219 

10,357 

9,373 

5,069 

4,160 

984 

276 

551 

198 

82,049 

71,837 

9,630 

207 

3,043,209 

208 

2,721,261 

194 

18,20S, 980 

Middle Atlantic.... 

445 

429 

35,362 

28,902 

13,657 

14,806 

6,460 

2,581 

3,726 

420 

514,466 

446,041 

51,655' 

416 

8,090,785 

421 

8,018,127' 

390 

72,660,081 

East North Central. 

266 

254 

30,538 

27,149 

18,761 

7,997 

3,389 

839 

1,971 

244 

208,430 

144,117 

60,852 

247 

5,269,006 

251 

5,334,902 

238 

25,424,710 

Wes WSTorthCentral. 

126 

121 

12,092' 

10,565 

7,035 

3,427 

1,527 

472 

872 

116 

23i834 

15; 729 

7,816' 

113 

2 , 289", 926 

113 

2,249,614 

108 

9,045,727 

South Atlantic. 

154 

139 

9,553 

8,339 

5,370 

2,954 

1,214 

293 

718 

132 

23,125 

18,790 

4,174 

133 

2,156,093 

133 

2,064,406 

126 

15,831,465 

East South Central. 

61 

53 

5,061 

3,584 

2,610 

974 

1,477 

384 

1,076 

53 

7,035 

5,404 

1,436 

50 

776,651 

52 

806,611 

54 

4,381,014 

West South Central. 

55 

51 

3,781 

2,669 

1, 116 

1,470 

1,112 

479 

609 

50 

2,565 

766 

1,799 

45 

587,506 

45 

590,525 

44 

3;152,530 

Mountain. 

21 

17 

1,514 

1,278 

859 

419 

236 

10 

177 

18 

1,773 

733 

'739 

17 

406,075 

17 

420,177 

19 

2,116,231 

Pacific. 

79 

75 

7,970 

6,987 

5,200 

1,642 

983 

231 

661 

71 

55,475 

53,274 

2,201 

69 

1,583,946 

70 

1,514,758 

65 

7,497,383 

New England: 




















Maine. 

19 

16 

1,947 

1,947 

1,795 

152 




13i 

1 170 

74fi 

3K2 

17 

450 701 

17 

4*26 935 

16 

1 41S 629 

New Hampshire.... 

16 

16 

'371 

371 

'144 

213 




14 

91 

45 

46 

13 

119; 838 

14 

83,715 

12 

1,090,511 

Vermont. 

9 

8 

432 

224 

129 

95 

208 

105 

103 

8 

126 

60 

66 

5 

52; 629 

5 

49,'818 

5 

'235,091 

Massachusetts. 

130 

127 

5,070 

4,387 

1,773 

2,484 

683 

155 

391 

118 

55,851 

47,164 

8,147 

122 

1,735,989 

122 

1,514,223 

117 

12,326,194 

Rhode Island. 

19 

17 

788 

760 

349 

411 

28 

4 

4 

15 

902 

491 

411 

16 

206,750 

16 

201,374 

14 

1,024,915 

Connecticut. 

35 

35 

1,749 

1,684 

879 

805 

65 

12 

53 

30 

23,909 

23,331 

578 

34 

477,242 

34 

445,196 

30 

2,113,640 

Middle Atlantic: 




















New York. 

221 

212 

21,692 

17,197 

8,590 

8,490 

4,495 

1,979 

2,417 

213 

347,207 

286,478 

44,100 

206 

5,417,330 

209 

5,019,376 

189 

50,103,260 

New Jersey. 

59 

58 

3,806 

3,467 

1,760 

1,458 

339 

95 

244 

56 

55,121 

53,963 

1,017 

57 

813,250 

57 

963,796! 

53 

3,660,506 

Pennsylvania. 

165 

159 

9,864 

8,238 

3,307 

4,858 

1,626 

507 

1,065 

151 

112,138 

105,600 

6,538 

153 

1,860,205 

155 

2,034,955 

148 

18,896,315 

East North Central: 




















Ohio. 

83 

80 

9,669 

8,672 

6,264 

2,399 

997 

231 

457 

77 

150,696 

100,085 

50,611 

80 

1,559,283 

81 

1,553,955 

76 

8,044,755 

Indiana. 

40 

37 

4,097 

3,852 

2,665 

1,187 

245 

88 

157 

38 

10,904 

8,124 

1,185 

35 

673,678 

36 

632,565 

35 

3,289,780 

Illinois. 

88 

S3 

9,916 

8,686 

5,590 

2,714 

1,230 

221 

755 

79 

24,872 

15,685 

7,321 

79 

1,886,562 

82 

1,927,837| 

77 

9,314,319 

Michigan. 

31 

30 

2,725 

2,311 

1,496 

815 

414 

97 

301 

28 

2,041 

996 

1,045 

30 

445,706 

30 

446,319: 

28 

1,603,363 

Wisconsin. 

24 

24 

4,131 

3,628 

2,746 

882 

503 

202 

301 

22 

19,917 

19,227 

690 

23 

703,777 

22 

774,226 

22 

3,172,493 

West North Central: 




















Minnesota. 

29 

28 

2,142 

1,821 

1,060 

761 

321 

107 

91 

29 

8,386 

4,338 

3; 937 

27 

326,162 

27 

313,629 

25 

1,590,935 

Iowa. 

27 

26 

1,761 

1,556 

917 

639 

205 

65 

128 

24 

892 

332 

560 

24 

301,333 

24 

309,778 

24 

1,345, 729 

Missouri. 

37 

36 

2,978 

2,275 

1,104 

1,068 

703 

154 

501 

33 

10,675 

8,064 

2,433 

30 

522,434 

30 

487,710 

28 

2,464,639 

North Dakota. 

2 

2 

148 

99 

37 

62 

49 

27 

22 

2 

144 

16 

128 

2 

32,992 

2 

25,295 

2 

167,963 

South Dakota. 

2 

2 

548 

548 

548 





2 

568 

568 


2 

258,585 

2 

236.716 

2 

829,700 

Nebraska. 

14 

13 

945 

911 

449 

462 

34 

18 

16 

12 

482 

210 

272 

13l 

221,421 

13 

25ft 984 

13 

80i;544 

Kansas. 

15 

14 

3,570 

3,355 

2,920 

435 

215 

101 

114 

14 

2,687 

2,201 

486 

15 

626,999 

15 

618,502 

14 

1,845,217 

South Atlantic: 




















Delaware. 

9 

9 

241 

235 

85 

150 

6 

( J ) 


7 

122 

99 

23 

9 

39,722 

9 

39,723 

9 

254,170 

Maryland. 

31 

28 

1,831 

1,454 

516 

923 

377 

28 

349 

30 

4,978 

3,795 

1,183 

29 

289,894 

29 

264,748 

25 

1,848,055 

District of Columbia 

26 

23 

2,528 

2,235 

1,676 

559 

293 

74 

99 

22 

8,763 

7,418 

1,345 

23 

911,393 

21 

825,312 

22 

8,997,476 

Virginia. 

27 

25 

3,181 

3,146 

2,657 

489 

35 

12 

17 

23 

6,363 

5,843 

520 

20 

655,294 

21 

649,222 

19 

3,209,190 

West Virginia. 

5 

4 

246 

167 

15 

152 

79 

41 

38 

4 

245 

109 

136 

3 

12,131 

4 

67,795 

4 

138,318 

North Carolina. 

10 

10 

426 

239 

150 

89 

187 

86 

91 

9 

303 

147 

156 

10 

74,983 

10 

57,170 

9 

206,700 

South Carolina. 

14 

13 

255 

242 

21 

221 

13 

( s ) 

2 

12 

303 

42 

261 

11 

27,518 

11 

21,913 

11 

408,717 

Georgia. 

26 

22 

708 

533 

226 

307 

175 

52 

112 

21 

2,003 

1,311 

531 

23 

124,299 

23 

120,316 

22 

645,839 

Florida. 

6 

5 

137 

88 

24 

64 

49 

(*) 

10 

4 

45 

26 

19 

5 

20,859 

5 

18,207 

5 

123,000 

East South Central: 




















Kentucky. 

31 

26 

2,165 

1,066 

521 

545 

1,099 

267 

815 

27 

4,943 

3,991 

925 

25 

281,665 

26 

313,635 

25 

1,629,474 

Tennessee. 

17 

16 

2,326 

2,146 

1,802 

344 

180 

67 

113 

15 

1,374 

1,026 

348 

15 

387,260 

16 

388,493 

17 

2,373,854 

Alabama. 

11 

10 

390 

192 

142 

50 

198 

50 

148 

9 

617 

323 

126 

9 

60,320 

9 

57,087 

10 

244,686 


2 

1 

180 

180 

145 

35 




2 

101 

64 

37 

1 

47,406 

1 

47,396 

2 

133,000 

West South Central: 



















Arkansas. 

8 

7 

371 

213 

66 

147 

158 

61 

97 

7 

298 

56 

242 1 

7 

63,954 

7 

58,996 

7 

273,500 

Louisiana. 

19 

18 

1,279 

1,219 

402 

734 

60 

28 

32 

17 

948 

413 

535 

16 

106,876 

15 

151,984 

15 

1,042,902 

Oklahoma. 

4 

4 

305 

69 

16 

53 

236 

117 

109 

4 

188 

27 

161 

4 

72,435 

4 

66,854 

4 

289,886 

Texas. 

24 

22 

1,826 

1,168 

632 

536 

658 

273 

371 

22 

1,131 

270 

861 

18 

344,241 

19 

312,691 

18 

1,546,242 

Mountain: 




















Montana. 

4 

4 

207 

192 

87 

105 

15 

9 

6 

4 

173 

59 

114 

3 

49,576 

3 

54,417 

4 

240,431 


1 

1 

177 

177 

177 





1 

43 

43 

. 

1 

31,000 

1 

39,000 

1 

93,000 


1 

1 

53 

53 

44 

9 




1 

12 

10 

2 

1 

14,919 

1 

14,919 

1 

15,000 

Colorado. 

9 

9 

948 

731 

429 

302 

217 

( J ) 

168 

9 

1,441 

536 

604 

9 

299;312 

9 

300; 841 

9 

1,747; 600 


1 












. 








2 

















1 

12,000 

U tah. 

3 

2 

129 

125 

122 

3 

4 

1 

3 

3 

104 

85 

19 

3 

11,268 

3 

11,000 

3 

8; 200 





















Pacific: 

W ashington. 

19 

19 

1,445 

1,077 

747 

330 

368 

126 

226 

19 

1,365 

483 

882 

17 

223,052 

17 

208,630 

16 

1,456,200 

Oregon. 

11 

10 

704 

616 

463 

153 

88 

18 

70 

10 

41,107 

40,857 

250 

10 

112,171 

10 

116,877 

10 

342,195 

California. 

49 

46 

5,821 

5,294 

3,990 

1,159 

527 

87 

365 

42 

13,003 

11,934 

1,069 

42 

1,248,723 

43 

1,189,251 

• 39 

5,698,988 


1 Includes those whose sex was not reported. 1 Not reported. 










































































































































































40 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 


COMPARISON WITH REPORT FOR 1904. 

Table 30 gives a comparative summary of the sta¬ 
tistics of the institutions in this class, in 1910 and 
1904, the figures for 1904 combining the two classes of 
permanent and temporary homes which are consoli¬ 
dated in this report. 

Comparative Summary—Homes for the Care of Adults, or 
Adults and Children, 1910 and 1904. 


Tabic 30 

DIVISION OR STATE. 

NUMBER OF 
INSTITUTIONS. 

NUMBER OF INMATES 
REPORTED AT CLOSE OF 

THE YEAR. 

1910. 

1904. 

In¬ 

crease. 1 

1910. 

1904. 

Increase. 1 

United States... 

1,435 

1,202 

233 

116.228 

105,812 

10,416 

New England.... 

228 

210 

18 

10,357 

10,784 

-427 

Maine. 

19 

20 

-1 

1,947 

2,946 

-999 

Nfiw Hampshire. 

16 

16 


371 

443 

—72 

Vermont. 

9 

9 


432 

358 

74 

Massachusetts. 

130 

120 

10 

5,070 

5,029 

41 

Rhode Island. 

19 

13 

6 

788 

595 

193 

Connecticut. 

35 

32 

3 

1,749 

1,413 

336 

Middle Atlantic. 

445 

378 

67 

35,362 

28,357 

7,005 

New York . 

221 

200 

21 

21,692 

18,179 

3,513 

New Jersey. 

59 

49 

10 

3,806 

2,931 

875 

Pennsylvania . 

165 

129 

36 

9,864 

7,247 

2,617 

East North Central... 

266 

207 

59 

30,538 

30,592 

-54 

Ohio . 

83 

68 

15 

9,669 

11,131 

-1,462 

Indiana. 

40 

27 

13 

4,097 

3,973 

124 

Illinois. 

88 

64 

24 

9,916 

8,691 

1,225 

Michigan. 

31 

26 

5 

2,725 

2,457 

268 

Wisconsin. 

24 

22 

2 

4,131 

4,340 

-209 

West North Central.. 

126 

102 

24 

12,092 

11,837 

255 

Minnesota. 

29 

18 

11 

2,142 

1,088 

1,054 

Iowa. 

27 

24 

3 

1,761 

1,629 

132 

Missouri. 

37 

36 

1 

2,978 

2,945 

33 

North Dakota. 

2 

3 

-1 

148 

57 

91 

South Dakota. 

2 

1 

1 

548 

211 

337 

Nebraska. 

14 

9 

5 

945 

922 

23 

Kansas. 

15 

11 

4 

3,570 

4,985 

-1,415 

South Atlantic. 

154 

130 

24 

9,553 

9,363 

190 

Delaware. 

9 

7 

2 

241 

147 

94 

Maryland. 

31 

30 

1 

1,831 

1,501 

330 

District of Columbia. 

26 

24 

2 

2,528 

2,096 

432 

Virginia. 

27 

27 


3,181 

4,490 

— 1,309 

West Virginia. 

5 

4 

1 

'246 

138 

108 

North Carolina. 

10 

8 

2 

426 

252 

174 

South Carolina. 

14 

7 

7 

255 

180 

75 

Georgia. 

26 

16 

10 

708 

494 

214 

Florida. 

6 

7 

-1 

137 

65 

72 

East South Central ... 

61 

47 

14 

5,061 

3,310 

1,751 

Kentucky. 

31 

25 

6 

2,165 

1,623 

542 

Tennessee. 

17 

14 

3 

2,326 

1,473 

853 

Alabama. 

11 

5 

6 

' 390 

170 

220 

Mississippi. 

2 

3 

-1 

180 

44 

136 

West South Central .. 

55 

50 

5 

3,781 

3,080 

701 

Arkansas. 

8 

7 

1 

371 

265 

106 

Louisiana. 

19 

17 

2 

1,279 

1,161 

118 

Oklahoma. 

4 

2 

2 

305 

31 

274 

Texas. 

24 

24 


1,826 

1,623 

203 

Mountain. 

21 

19 

2 

1,514 

1,209 

305 

Montana. 

4 

4 


207 

151 

56 

Idaho. 

1 

1 


177 

121 

56 

Wyoming . 

1 

1 


53 

48 

5 

Colorado.^. . 

9 

11 

—2 

948 

853 

95 

New Mexico . 

1 


i 




Arizona. 

2 

1 

i 


11 

— 11 

Utah . 

3 

1 

2 

129 

25 

104 

Nevada . 







Pacific. 

79 

59 

20 

7,970 

7,280 

690 

Washington . 

19 

9 

10 

1,445 

661 

784 

Oregon . 

11 

8 

3 

704 

367 

337 

California . 

49 

42 

7 

5,821 

6,252 

-431 


1 A minus sign (—) denotes decrease. 


From this table it appears that there has been a 
total increase of 233 institutions. Five states—Colo¬ 
rado, Florida, Maine, Mississippi, and North Dakota— 


report a decrease in the number of institutions, and 
seven—Idaho, Montana, New Hampshire, Texas, Ver¬ 
mont, Virginia, and Wyoming—report the same num¬ 
ber as in 1904, while Nevada remains the only state 
that has no institution of this class. The largest 
increase reported is in Pennsylvania (36), followed by 
Illinois (24), New York (21), Ohio (15), Indiana (13), 
Minnesota (11), and Georgia, Massachusetts, New 
Jersey, and Washington (10 each). 

The increase in the total number of inmates reported 
at the close of the year is 10,416. Eight states—Ari¬ 
zona, California, Kansas, Maine, New Hampshire, 
Ohio, Virginia, and Wisconsin—show a decrease. The 
largest increase is reported from New York, followed 
by Pennsylvania, Illinois, and Minnesota. 

The number of inmates at the close of the year and 
the number of persons received during the year per 
100,000 of the total population are shown by geo¬ 
graphic divisions in the following ‘table: 


Table 31 

INMATES AT CLOSE OF THE YEAR: 1910. 


Division. 

Number 

per 

100,000 

popula¬ 

tion. 

Pacific. 

190 

Middle Atlantic. 

183 

East North Central. 

167 

New England. 

161 

West North Central. 

104 

South Atlantic. 

78 

East South Central. 

60 

Mountain. 

57 

West South Central. 

43 



PERSONS RECEIVED DURING THE YEAR: 

1910. 


Division. 

Number 

per 

100,000 

popula¬ 

tion. 

Middle Atlantic. 

2,612 

Pacific. 

1,323 

New England. 

U252 

East North Central. 

1,142 

West North Central. 

205 

South Atlantic. 

189 

East South Central. 

83 

Mountain. 

67 

West South Central. 

29 


It should be borne in mind that the table deals with 
data that are far from homogeneous either as to class 
of institutions covered or type of persons included. 
Among the institutions are federal and state soldiers’ 
homes, Masonic and other fraternal homes, homes for 
the aged under the care of Catholic sisters or private 
corporations, municipal lodging houses for transients, 
associated charities’ shelters, rescue homes for way¬ 
ward or fallen women, shelters for the unemployed, 
homes for incurables and convalescents, etc. Pri¬ 
marily, all these institutions are supposed to be de¬ 
signed for adults, yet a large number of children are 
provided for, some with their parents, and some tem¬ 
porarily, because no other suitable homes are open to 
them, while in many cases persons classed as children 
because legally minors are to all intents and purposes 
adults, being independent and self-supporting, and 
only temporarily in need of relief. 

PERMANENT AND TEMPORARY HOMES. 

Totals made up of such diverse elements evidently 
can not be regarded as fully satisfactory, yet the dis¬ 
tinction between the two classes of homes (permanent 
and temporary) is important and is frequently used. 
Tables 32 and 33 give, with what is believed to be sub- 






























































































































HOMES FOR ADULTS, OR 

stantial accuracy, the situation in this respect, showing 
for each class the number of homes, the number of 
inmates at the close of the year, and the number of 
persons received during the year. Under the head of 
“Permanent homes” are included those whose main 
purpose is to receive persons who have no prospect of 


ADULTS AND CHILDREN. 41 

ability to care for themselves; under the head of 
“ Temporary homes,” those which aim simply to supply 
relief or shelter for those in immediate or temporary 
need. The distinction between the two is not always 
easily drawn, but the classification is sufficiently accu¬ 
rate to bring out a general idea of the conditions. 


INMATES AT CLOSE OF THE YEAR IN PERMANENT AND TEMPORARY HOMES FOR THE CARE OF ADULTS, OR 

ADULTS AND CHILDREN, BY DIVISIONS AND STATES: 1910. 


Table 32 

ALL HOMES. 

PERMANENT HOMES. 

TEMPORARY HOMES. 

DIVISION OR STATE. 

Institu¬ 

tions 

reported. 

Inmates 
at close 
of the year. 

Institu¬ 

tions 

reported. 

Institu¬ 
tions re- 

Inmates reported. 

Institu¬ 

tions 

reported. 

Institu¬ 
tions re- 

Inmates reported. 


porting 
inmates 
at close of 
the year. 

Total. 

Adults. 

Children. 

porting 
mmates 
at close of 
the year. 

Total. 

Adults. 

Children. 

United States. 

1,435 

116,228 

808 

782 

78,050 

73,177 

4,873 

627 

576 

38,178 

25,669 

12,509 



Geographic divisions: 

New England. 

228 

10,357 

35,362 

30,538 

12,092 

9,553 

145 

139 

7,178 
19,009 
22,903 

6,889 

17,911 

22,025 

8,698 

6,598 

2,915 

289 

83 

80 

3,179 

2,484 

10,991 

695 

Middle Atlantic. 

445 

239 

236 

1,098 

206 

193 

16; 353 
7,635 
2,571 
2,735 

5,362 

2,511 

704 

East North Central. 

266 

156 

154 

878 

110 

99 

5,124 

West North Central. 

126 

76 

74 

9,521 

823 

50 

47 

U867 

South Atlantic. 

154 

85 

82 

6,818 

3,540 

2,396 

732 

220 

69 

57 

lj 741 

994 

East South Central. 

61 

5,061 

35 

32 

625 

26 

21 

U521 

669 

852 

West South Central. 

55 

3,781 

27 

24 

1,498 

898 

28 

27 

1,385 

1,171 

214 

Mountain. 

21 

1,514 

9 

7 

732 

12 

10 

782 

546 

236 

Pacific. 

79 

7,970 

36 

34 

5,953 

5,911 

42 

43 

42 

2,017 

1,076 

941 







New England: 

Maine. 

19 

1,947 

13 

12 

1,905 

1,905 


6 

4 

42 

42 


New Hampshire. 

16 

371 

15 

15 

361 

361 


1 

1 

10 

10 


Vermont . 

9 

432 

8 

8 

432 

224 

208 

1 




Massachusetts. 

130 

5,070 

75 

72 

2,669 

493 

2,634 

493 

35 

55 

55 

2,401 

295 

1,753 

648 

Rhode Island. 

19 

788 

12 

10 


7 

7 

267 

28 

Connecticut. 

35 

1,749 

22 

22 

1,318 

1,272 

46 

13 

13 

431 

412 

19 

Middle Atlantic: 

New York. 

221 

21,692 

120 

118 

10,891 

2,432 

10,317 

2,379 

574 

101 

94 

10,801 

6,880 

3,921 

New Jersey. 

59 

3i 806 

34 

34 

53 

25 

24 

1,374 

1,088 

285 

Pensylvania. 

165 

9,864 

9,669 

4,097 

9,916 

2,725 

4,131 

2,142 

85 

84 

5,686 

6,846 

5 , 215 

6,635 

471 

80 

75 

4,178 

2,823 

3,023 

1,155 

East North Central: 

Ohio. 

83 

« 

42 

41 

211 

41 

39 

2,037 

786 

Indiana. 

40 

22 

22 

3,499 

3,370 

129 

18 

15 

598 

482 

116 

Illinois. 

88 

57 

57 

7; 232 

6,966 

1,970 

266 

31 

25 

2,684 

1,720 

964 

Michigan. 

31 

20 

19 

2,078 

108 

11 

11 

647 

341 

306 

Wisconsin. 

24 

15 

15 

3; 248 

3,084 

1,115 

164 

9 

9 

883 

544 

339 

West North Central: 

Minnesota. 

29 

15 

15 

1,312 

197 

14 

13 

830 

706 

124 

Iowa. 

27 

1>1 

17 

17 

1,495 

1,403 

92 

10 

9 

266 

153 

113 

Missouri. 

37 

2,978 

1 148 

22 

21 

1,969 

1,638 

331 

15 

15 

1,009 

637 

372 

North Dakota. 

2 

1 

1 

40 

40 


1 

1 

108 

59 

49 


2 

548 

945 

2 

2 

548 

548 







Nebraska.... 

14 

9 

8 

656 

654 

2 

5 

5 

289 

257 

32 

Kansas. 

15 

3,570 

' 241 
1,831 

10 

10 

3,501 

206 

3,300 

201 

5 

4 

69 

55 

14 

South Atlantic: 

9 

7 

7 

206 


2 

2 

35 

29 

6 

Maryland. 

31 

16 

16 

916 

903 

i3 

15 

12 

915 

551 

364 

District of Columbia. 

26 

>2,528 

15 

14 

1,930 

1,924 

6 

11 

9 

598 

311 

287 


27 

(3,181 
) 246 

17 

17 

2,852 

2,852 


10 

8 

329 

294 

35 


5 

2 

1 

19 

19 


3 

3 

227 

148 

79 

North Carolina. 

10 

1 426 

6 

6 

358 

203 

155 

4 

4 

68 

36 

32 


14 

1 255 

6 

6 

89 

89 


8 

7 

166 

153 

13 

Georgia. 

26 

708 

13 

12 

400 

354 

46 

13 

10 

308 

179 

129 


6 

137 

3 

3 

48 

48 


3 

2 

89 

40 

49 

East South Central: 

Kentucky. 

31 

2,165 

17 

16 

1,131 

694 

437 

14 

10 

1,034 

372 

662 

Tennessee. 

17 

2,326 

390 

11 

10 

2,035 

1,933 

102 

6 

6 

291 

213 

78 

Alabama. 

11 

6 

5 

194 

108 

86 

5 

5 

196 

84 

112 


2 

180 

1 

1 

180 

ISO 


1 















West South Central: 

Arkansas. 

8 

371 

4 

3 

212 

89 

123 

4 

4 

159 

124 

35 

Louisiana. 

19 

1,279 

11 

10 

866 

851 

15 

8 

8 

413 

368 

45 

Oklahoma. 

4 

305 

3 

3 

250 

24 

226 

1 

1 

55 

45 

10 

Texas. 

24 

1,826 

9 

8 

1,068 

534 

534 

15 

14 

758 

634 

124 

Mountain: 

4 

207 

2 

2 

92 

92 


2 

2 

115 

100 

15 


i 

i 

9 

177 

53 

948 

1 

1 

177 

177 








1 

1 

53 

53 








3 

3 

410 

410 


6 

6 

538 

321 

217 


l 

1 











2 

3 


1 





1 





Utah 

129 





3 

2 

i29 

125 

4 













Pacific: 

Washington. 

19 

1,445 

5 

5 

775 

753 

22 

14 

14 

670 

324 

346 

Oregon. 

11 

704 

4 

4 

350 

331 

19 

7 

6 

354 

285 

69 

California. 

49 

5,821 

27 

25 

4,828 

4,827 

1 

22 

22 

993 

467 

526 















































































































































































42 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


PERSONS RECEIVED DURING THE YEAR IN PERMANENT AND TEMPORARY HOMES FOR THE CARE OF ADULTS, 
OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN, CLASSIFIED BY SEX, FOR DIVISIONS AND STATES: 1910. 


Table 33 

DIVISION OR STATE. 

total number received. 1 

MALES RECEIVED. 

FEMALES RECEIVED. 

In all homes. 

In 

permanent 

homes. 

In 

temporary 

homes. 

Inall homes. 

In 

permanent 

homes. 

In 

temporary 

homes. 

In all homes. 

In 

permanent 

homes. 

In 

temporary 

homes. 

United States. 

918,752 

27,710 

891,042 

756,691 

19,850 

736,841 

140,302 

7,695 

132,607 

Geographic divisions: 










New England. 

82,049 

2,192 

79,857 

71,837 

1,553 

70,284 

9,630 

639 

8,991 

Middle Atlantic. 

514,466 

6,167 

508,299 

446,041 

3,674 

442,367 

51,655 

2,389 

49,266 

East North Central. 

208, 430 

7,934 

200,496 

144,117 

6,023 

138,094 

60,852 

1,857 

58,995 

West North Central. 

23,834 

4,591 

19,243 

15,729 

3,149 

12,580 

7,816 

1,442 

6,374 

South Atlantic. 

23,125 

2,585 

20,540 

18,790 

2,080 

16,710 

4,174 

505 

3,669 

East South Central. 

7,035 

1,307 

5,728 

5,404 

1,097 

4,307 

1,436 

210 

1,226 

West South Central. 

2,565 

657 

1,908 

766 

334 

432 

1,799 

323 

1,476 

Mountain. 

1,773 

300 

1,473 

733 

288 

445 

739 

12 

727 

Pacific. 

55,475 

1,977 

53,498 

53,274 

1,652 

51,622 

2,201 

318 

1,883 

New England: 










Maine. 

1,170 

576 

594 

746 

569 

177 

382 

7 

375 

New Hampshire. 

91 

72 

19 

45 

45 


46 

27 

19 

Vermont.. 

126 

99 

27 

60 

60 


66 

39 

27 

Massachusetts. 

55,851 

923 

54,928 

47,164 

542 

46,622 

8,147 

381 

7,766 

Rhode Island. 

902 

127 

775 

491 

59 

432 

411 

68 

343 

Connecticut. 

23,909 

395 

23,514 

23,331 

278 

23,053 

578 

117 

461 

Middle Atlantic: 










New York. 

347,207 

4,054 

343,153 

286,478 

2,485 

283,993 

44,100 

1,559 

42,541 

New Jersey. 

55,121 

743 

54,378 

53,963 

390 

53,573 

1,017 

259 

758 

Pennsylvania. 

112,138 

1,370 

110,768 

105,600 

799 

104,801 

6,538 

571 

5,967 

East North Central: 










Ohio. 

150,696 

1,693 

149,003 

100,085 

1,446 

98,639 

50,611 

247 

50,364 

Indiana. 

10,904 

1,436 

9,468 

8,124 

953 

7,171 

1,185 

429 

756 

Illinois. 

24,872 

2,876 

21,996 

15,685 

2,048 

13,637 

7,321 

828 

6,493 

Michigan. 

2,041 

811 

1,230 

996 

618 

378 

1,045 

193 

852 

Wisconsin. 

19,917 

1,118 

18,799 

19,227 

958 

18,269 

690 

160 

530 

West North Central: 










Minnesota. 

8,386 

705 

7,681 

4,338 

418 

3,920 

3,937 

287 

3,650 

Iowa. 

892 

424 

468 

332 

254 

78 

560 

170 

390 

Missouri. 

10,675 

1,219 

9,456 

8,064 

457 

7,607 

2,433 

762 

1,671 

North Dakota. 

144 

19 

125 

16 

16 


128 

3 

125 

South Dakota... 

568 

568 


568 

568 





Nebraska. 

482 

139 

343 

210 

97 

113 

272 

42 

230 

Kansas. 

2,687 

1,517 

1,170 

2,201 

1,339 

862 

486 

178 

308 

South Atlantic: 



- 







Delaware. 

122 

45 

77 

99 

22 

77 

23 

23 


Maryland. 

4,978 

175 

4,803 

3,795 

77 

3,718 

1,183 

98 

1,085 

District of Columbia. 

8,763 

1,089 

7,674 

7,418 

1,003 

6,415 

1,345 

86 

1,259 

Virginia. 

6,363 

748 

5,615 

5,843 

693 

5,150 

520 

55 

465 

West Virginia. 

245 

32 

213 

109 


109 

136 

32 

104 

North Carolina. 

303 

180 

123 

147 

147 


156 

33 

123 

South Carolina. 

303 

116 

187 

42 

35 

7 

261 

81 

180 

Georgia. 

2,003 

170 

1,833 

1,311 

77 

1,234 

531 

93 

438 

Florida. 

45 

30 

15 

26 

26 


19 

4 

15 

East South Central: 










Kentucky. 

4,943 

316 

4,627 

3,991 

181 

3,810 

925 

135 

790 

Tennessee. 

1,374 

847 

527 

1,026 

800 

226 

348 

47 

301 

Alabama. 

617 

63 

554 

323 

52 

271 

126 

11 

115 

Mississippi. 

101 

81 

20 

64 

64 


37 

17 

20 

West South Central: 










Arkansas. 

298 

84 

214 

56 

48 

8 

242 

36 

206 

Louisiana. 

948 

210 

738 

413 

78 

335 

535 

132 

403 

Oklahoma. 

188 

46 

142 

27 

27 


161 

19 

142 

Texas. 

1,131 

317 

814 

270 

181 

89 

861 

136 

725 

Mountain: 










Montana. 

173 

37 

136 

59 

37 

22 

114 


114 

Idaho. 

43 

43 


43 

43 





Wyoming. 

12 

12 


10 

10 


2 

2 


Colorado 7. 

1,441 

208 

1,233 

536 

198 

338 

604 

10 

594 

New Mexico. 










Arizona. 










Utah. 

104 


104 

85 


85 

19 


19 

Nevada. 










Pacific: 






' 




Washington. 

1,365 

197 

1,168 

483 

180 

303 

882 

17 

865 

Oregon. 

41,107 

106 

41,001 

40,857 

78 

40,779 

250 

28 

222 

California. 

13,003 

1,674 

11,329 

11,934 

1,394 

10,540 

1,069 

273 

796 


i Includes those whose sex was not reported. 


Numerically and in number of inmates at the close 
of the year, the permanent institutions exceed the 
temporary institutions; in the number of persons 
received during the year, however, the temporary 
homes far outclass the permanent homes. Both 
classes are distributed over the country in about the 


same proportion, the Middle Atlantic division being 
followed by the East North Central, New England, 
South Atlantic, West North Central, Pacific, East and 
West South Central, and Mountain divisions, in the 
order named, which order coincides closely with that 
in the ratio of inmates to total population. 
































































































































HOMES FOR ADULTS, OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN. 


As was to be expected, adults outnumbered children— 
73,177 to 4,873 in the permanent homes and 25,669 
to 12,509 in the temporary homes—although it is to be 
remembered that in the temporary homes the great 
majority of the children are independent minors 
classed as children simply because they are under age. 
Among the adults reported as inmates at the close of 
the year, males greatly outnumbered females, and the 


43 

same is true in regard to those received into institu¬ 
tions during the year. Among the children or minors, 
however, the reverse is true. 

PERMANENT HOMES. 

A more detailed analysis of these figures is made in 
the following table, which shows the more important 
types of permanent homes and their inmates: 


INMATES OF PERMANENT HOMES FOR THE CARE OF ADULTS, OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN, AT CLOSE OF 

THE YEAR, BY CLASS OF INSTITUTION, FOR DIVISIONS AND STATES: 1910. 


Table 34 

DIVISION OR STATE. 

ALL PERMANENT 
HOMES. 

soldiers' homes. 

HOMES OF LITTLE SIS¬ 
TERS OF THE POOR. 

FRATERNAL HOMES. 

ALL OTHER. 

Number 
of insti¬ 
tutions 
reported. 

Number of 
inmates at 
close of 
the year. 

Number 
of insti¬ 
tutions 
reported. 

Number of 
inmates at 
close of 
the year. 

Number 
of insti¬ 
tutions 
reported. 

Number of 
inmates at 
close of 
the year. 

Number 
of insti¬ 
tutions 
reported. 

Number of 
inmates at 
close of 
the year. 

Number 
of insti- 
•tutions 
reported. 

Number of 
inmates at 
close of 
the year. 

United States. 

808 

78,050 

63 

40,200 

42 

8,362 

74 

5,701 

629 

23,787 

Geographic divisions: 











New England. 

145 

7,178 

7 

3,127 

4 

869 

7 

265 

127 

2,917 

Middle Atlantic. 

239 

19,009 

9 

3,640 

15 

3,354 

20 

1,402 

195 

10,613 

East North Central. 

156 

22,903 

10 

15,619 

10 

1,742 

12 

1,028 

124 

4,514 

West North Central. 

76 

9,521 

12 

6,137 

4 

647 

9 

637 

51 

2,100 

South Atlantic. 

85 

6,818 

8 

4,303 

4 

686 

6 

291 

67 

1,538 

East South Central. 

35 

3,540 

5 

2,221 

1 

220 

6 

691 

23 

408 

West South Central. 

27 

2,396 

3 

592 

2 

392 

7 

954 

15 

458 

Mountain. 

9 

732 

4 

541 



3 

123 

2 

68 

Pacific. 

36 

5,953 

5 

4,020 

2 

452 

4 

310 

25 

1,171 

New England: 











Maine. 

13 

1,905 

1 

1,751 





12 

1.54 

New Hampshire. 

15 

'361 

1 

94 



2 

36 

12 

231 

Vermont. 

8 

432 

I 

99 



1 

16 

6 

317 

Massachusetts. 

75 

2,669 

2 

552 

2 

510 

1 

89 

70 

1,518 

Rhode Island. 

12 

493 

1 

130 

1 

200 

1 


9 

163 

Connecticut. 

22 

1,318 

1 

501 

1 

159 

2 

124 

18 

534 

Middle Atlantic: 











New York. 

120 

10,891 

2 

2,051 

7 

1,623 

9 

841 

102 

6,376 

New Jersey. 

34 

2,432 

2 

849 

2 

380 

2 

121 

28 

1,082 

Pennsylvania. 

85 

5,686 

5 

740 

6 

1,351 

9 

440 

65 

3,155 

East North Central: 











Ohio. 

42 

6,846 

3 

4,923 

4 

695 

2 

415 

33 

813 

Indiana. 

22 

3,499 

2 

2,728 

1 

150 

1 

131 

18 

490 

Illinois. 

57 

7,232 

2 

4,200 

3 

631 

6 

319 

46 

2,082 

Michigan. 

20 

2,078 

1 

1,221 

1 

66 

2 

108 

16 

683 

Wisconsin. 

15 

3,248 

2 

2,547 

1 

200 

1 

55 

11 

446 

West North Central: 











Minnesota. 

15 

1,312 

2 

553 

2 

272 

1 

48 

10 

439 


17 

1,495 

1 

850 



2 

84 

14 

561 

Missouri. 

22 

U969 

2 

544 

2 

375 

2 

315 

16 

735 


1 

40 

1 

40 








2 

548 

2 

548 








9 

656 

2 

506 



2 

31 

5 

119 


10 

3,501 

2 

3,096 



2 

159 

6 

246 

South Atlantic: 










7 

206 







7 

206 


16 

916 

1 

103 

1 

290 



14 

523 

District of Columbia. 

15 

1,930 

1 

1,424 

1 

200 

1 

19 

12 

287 

Virginia. 

17 

2,852 

3 

2,496 

1 

130 

1 

55 

12 

171 


2 

19 





1 


1 

19 


6 

358 

1 

145 



1 

159 

4 

54 


6 

89 







6 

89 

Georgia. 

13 

400 

1 

113 

1 

66 

2 

58 

9 

163 


3 

48 

1 

22 





2 

26 

East South Central: 











Kentucky. 

17 

1,131 

1 

237 

1 

220 

4 

475 

11 

199 


11 

2,035 

2 

1,726 



1 

135 

8 

174 


6 

194 

1 

78 



1 

81 

4 

35 


1 

180 

1 

180 







West South Central: 












4 

212 

1 

80 



1 

129 

2 

3 


11 

866 

1 

122 

2 

392 



8 

352 


3 

250 





3 

250 




9 

1,068 

1 

390 



3 

575 

5 

103 

Mountain: 











2 

92 

1 

91 



1 

1 




1 

177 

1 

177 








1 

53 

1 

53 








3 

410 

1 

220 



1 

122 

1 

68 


1 






1 





1 








1 


Utah . 






















Pacific: 












5 

775 

1 

690 



1 

38 

3 

47 


4 

350 

1 

134 



1 

37 

2 

179 

California... 

27 

4,828 

3 

3,196 

2 

452 

2 

235 

20 

945 































































































































44 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 


From this table it appears that of the 808 perma- 
ment homes, 63 are Soldiers’ Homes and 74 are fra¬ 
ternal beneficiary homes (Masonic, Odd Fellows, etc.), 
leaving 671 of a general type. Of the general homes, 
42 are conducted by a single central organization, the 
Little Sisters of the Poor. Of the 78,050 inmates of 
these 808 permanent homes, 40,200 are in the Sol¬ 
diers’ Homes, 5,701 in the fraternal homes, and 8,362 
in the homes of the Little Sisters of the Poor, leaving 
23,787, or 30.5 per cent of the total, in all the other 
classes of homes. The average number of inmates 
per institution for all the permanent homes is 97; for 
the Soldiers’ Homes, 638; for the fraternal homes, 77; 
for the homes of the Little Sisters of the Poor, 199; 
and for the other homes, 38. 

It is apparent, then, that if homes that are restricted 
in their reception of inmates to certain limited classes 
are eliminated from the number of permanent homes, 
the balance represents a much smaller amount of re¬ 
lief rendered to adults in general than would appear 
from the totals. This is especially noticeable in cer¬ 
tain sections of the country. Thus, by excluding the 
Soldiers’ Homes alone, the number of inmates of 
permanent homes in the East North Central division 
is reduced from 22,903 to 7,284, and in the West 
North Central division from 9,521 to 3,384. The same 
situation affects the statistics as to sex. The total 
number of adult males reported as inmates of insti¬ 
tutions at the close of the year was 59,677. In the 
Soldiers’ Homes there were 40,200, of whom 37,583 
were males and 2,617 females (wives or widows of 
veterans). If these figures are deducted from the 
respective totals, there remain 22,094 males and 35,- 
232 females. Viewed from the standpoint of the in¬ 
stitutions of general character, therefore, the females 
are in the majority, and while strictly correct, it is 
misleading to say that more men than women are per¬ 
manent recipients of public charity. Another signifi¬ 
cant fact is that in five states—Mississippi, North 
Dakota, South Dakota, Idaho, and Wyoming—the 
Soldiers’ Homes are the only institutions for adults, 
while in Oklahoma, of four institutions reported, three 
are fraternal homes and one a rescue home. 

TEMPORARY HOMES. 

The temporary homes may be loosely divided into 
three classes: Shelters for transients, rescue homes for 
the wayward or fallen, and homes for the friendless 
providing relief for respectable persons ordinarily 


self-supporting but temporarily in need. The first 
class includes municipal lodging houses, Salvation 
Army industrial homes, immigrant homes, and simi¬ 
lar institutions under the care of associated charities 
or other philanthropic societies; the second class in¬ 
cludes the Florence Crittenton Missions, Houses of 
the Good Shepherd, and similar institutions; and the 
third takes in all that are not represented in the other 
two classes, particularly homes for women out of 
work, homes for working boys and girls, convalescent 
homes, etc. With regard to the homes for working 
people, only those arc included which, so far as could 
be learned, are distinctly benevolent in character. 
Within the past few years a large number of homes 
have been established by the Young Women’s Chris¬ 
tian Associations and by private corporations which 
furnish board to working girls at a lower rate than 
is usual in boarding houses. As a rule these houses 
are provided rent free and there is no expense for 
general superintendence or for interest on investment, 
and the sums charged the inmates are intended to 
cover no more than the actual cost of running expenses. 
In general these homes have not been included, 
although the mere fact that such a home meets its 
running expenses by receipts from inmates has not 
been regarded as the decisive factor. 

A better view of the work carried on by these dif¬ 
ferent classes of institutions is obtained from the 
record of the number of persons received during the 
year than from the number of inmates at any particu¬ 
lar date, and this is set forth in Table 35. 

The reports for municipal shelters, immigrant 
homes, and private shelters for transients were not 
entirely satisfactory and the statistics presented prob¬ 
ably do not represent accurately the full amount of 
work done by those classes of institutions. In some 
cases officials of municipal shelters refused information 
on the ground that the institutions were really a part 
of the police system rather than conducted for benev¬ 
olent purposes. The information received from other 
institutions also proved to be somewhat vague. 

There were 15 immigrant homes reported—1 in 
Maryland, 4 in Massachusetts, and 10 in New York— 
sheltering in all 45,221 persons. Of the 57 homes or 
shelters included under this head, 36 homes report¬ 
ing 572,000 persons received during the year were 
under private auspices. The Salvation Army indus¬ 
trial homes, being under one central organization, are 
shown separately. 



HOMES FOR ADULTS, OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN. 45 

PERSONS RECEIVED INTO TEMPORARY HOMES FOR THE CARE OF ADULTS, OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN, 
DURING THE YEAR, BY CLASS OF INSTITUTION, FOR DIVISIONS AND STATES: 1910. 


Table 35 

DIVISION OB STATE. 

ALL TEMPORARY 
HOMES. 

shelter homes 
(municipal, 

IMMIGRANT, ETC.). 

SALVATION ARMY 
INDUSTRIAL HOMES. 

RESCUE HOMES. 

ALL OTHER. 

Number 
of insti¬ 
tutions 
reported. 

Number of 
persons 
received. 

Number 
of insti¬ 
tutions 
reported. 

Number of 
persons 
received. 

Number 
of insti¬ 
tutions 
reported. 

Number of 
persons 
received. 

Number 
of insti¬ 
tutions 
reported. 

Number of 
persons 
received. 

Number 
of insti¬ 
tutions 
reported. 

Number 
of persons 
received. 

United States. 

627 

891,042 

57 

787,573 

100 

14,239 

230 

20,542 

240 

68,688 

Geographic divisions: 











New England. 

83 

79,857 

12 

70,667 

13 

2,011 

22 

2,208 

36 

4,971 

Middle Atlantic. 

206 

508,299 

26 

457,234 

31 

6,752 

58 

6,104 

91 

38,209 

East North Central. 

110 

200,496 

8 

179,951 

18 

2,023 

40 

4,036 

44 

14,486 

West North Central. 

50 

19,243 

3 

12,919 

10 

1,150 

27 

2,213 

10 

2,961 

South Atlantic. 

69 

20,540 

5 

14,553 

6 

884 

31 

2,237 

27 

2,866 

East South Central. 

26 

5,728 

1 

1,629 

5 

430 

13 

827 

7 

2,842 

West South Central. 

28 

1,908 



1 

71 

16 

936 

11 

901 

Mountain. 

12 

1,473 



5 

163 

5 

700 

2 

610 

Pacific. 

43 

53,498 

2 

50,620 

ii 

755 

18 

1,281 

12 

842 

New England: 











Maine. 

6 

594 



1 

161 

2 

91 

3 

342 

New Hampshire. 

i 

19 







i 

19 

Vermont. t. 

1 

27 





i 

27 



Massachusetts.i. 

55 

54,928 

11 

48,243 

6 

795 

ii 

1,305 

27 

4,585 

Rhode Island. 

7 

775 



2 

426 

4 

329 

1 

20 

Connecticut. 

13 

23,514 

1 

22,424 

4 

629 

4 

456 

4 

5 

Middle Atlantic: 











New York. 

101 

343,153 

16 

303,910 

12 

3,395 

24 

2,899 

49 

32,949 

New Jersey. 

25 

54,378 

3 

51,367 

8 

1,866 

8 

617 

6 

528 

Pennsylvania. 

80 

110,768 

7 

101,957 

11 

1,491 

26 

2,588 

36 

4,732 

East North Central: 











Ohio. 

41 

149,003 

4 

142,947 

8 

735 

14 

1,365 

15 

3,956 

Indiana. 

18 

9,468 

2 

6,900 

4 

3(>4 

6 

331 

6 

1,873 

Illinois. 

31 

21,996 

1 

12,104 

3 

520 

9 

1,035 

18 

8,337 

Michigan. 

11 

1,230 



2 

284 

7 

886 

2 

60 

W isconsin. 

9 

18,799 

1 

18,000 

1 

120 

4 

419 

3 

260 

West North Central: 











Minnesota. 

14 

7,681 

1 

4,700 

3 

310 

7 

641 

3 

2,030 

Iowa. 

10 

468 



2 

47 

6 

274 

2 

147 

Missouri.,. 

15 

9,456 

1 

7,171 

3 

718 

7 

806 

4 

761 

North Dakota. 

1 

125 





1 

125 



South Dakota. 










Nebraska. 

5 

343 



2 

75 

3 

268 



Kansas. 

5 

1,170 

1 

1,048 



3 

99 

1 

23 

South Atlantic: 











2 

77 



1 

77 

1 

(i) 



Maryland. 

15 

4,803 

2 

3,553 

1 

309 

6 

' 609 

6 

332 

District of Columbia. 

11 

7,674 

1 

5,040 

1 

181 

3 

672 

6 

1,781 


10 

5,615 

1 

5,000 



5 

220 

4 

395 


3 

213 



1 

103 

2 

110 




4 

123 





4 

123 




8 

187 





3 

169 

5 

18 

Georgia. 

13 

1,833 

1 

960 

2 

214 

6 

334 

4 

325 


3 

15 





1 

(') 

2 

15 

East South Central: 









Kentucky. 

14 

4,627 

1 

1,629 

1 

38 

7 

376 

5 

2,584 


6 

527 



2 

211 

4 

316 




5 

554 



2 

181 

1 

115 

2 

258 


i 

20 





1 

20 












West South Central: 












4 

214 





3 

116 

1 

98 


8 

738 



1 

71 

2 

221 

5 

446 


1 

142 





1 

142 




15 

814 





10 

457 

5 

357 

Mountain: 












9 

136 





2 

136 

























6 

1,233 



3 

78 

2 

545 

1 

610 













1 

r 







1 

0) 

Utah 

3 

104 



2 

85 

1 

19 














Paciftc: 












14 

1,168 



4 

174 

6 

546 

4 

448 


7 

4E001 

1 

40,620 

1 

131 

5 

250 



California. 

22 

11,329 

1 

io;ooo 

6 

450 

7 

485 

8 

394 


1 Not reported 








































































































































46 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 


SEX AND AGE OF INMATES. 

When estimates are reported to the extent to which 
they have been by some of these institutions, it is 
difficult to obtain accurate statistics for sex. As nearly 
as can be ascertained, however, the following repre¬ 
sents the situation with substantial accuracy: 


Table 36 persons received in homes 

FOR ADULTS, OR ADULTS 
AND CHILDREN.* 1910. 

CLASS OF INSTITUTION. 



Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Total. 

891,042 

758,435 

132,607 

Municipal and private shelters and immigrant 
homes. 

787,573 
14,239 
20,542 
68,688 

714,359 
14,239 
1,110 
28,727 

73,214 

19,432 
39,961 

Salvation Army Industrial Homes for men. 

Rescue homes. 

Homes for friendless, etc. 


The classification of minors, even up to 18 or 21 
years of age, as children renders any satisfactory 
age grouping even more difficult than that by sex. 
The total number of children reported as inmates 
of the institutions was 17,382. Of these, 4,873 were 
in permanent homes and 12,509 in temporary homes, 
including 5,954 in rescue homes. Of this entire 
number only 1,986 were reported as received with 
parents. There were 2,067 • reported as delinquent, 
leaving 13,294 dependent. In view of the fact that 
a great majority of the females in rescue homes are 
under age and may legitimately be classed as delin¬ 
quents, it is evident that there has been considerable 
confusion in making the distinction between adults 
and children and also between dependent and delin¬ 
quent children. 


Class IV.—HOSPITALS AND SANITARIUMS. 


The institutions included in this class are those 
hospitals and sanitariums which may be regarded 
as benevolent institutions in distinction from those 
which are conducted on a distinctively business basis. 

In regard to no other class has it been so difficult 
to decide the principle on which selection should be 
made. Broadly speaking, those hospitals are included 
which are open to persons who need treatment , but who 
for any reason are unable to meet the full cost. This 
has not, however, been the sole basis, for with hospitals, 
as with physicians, there is a great deal of charity which 
is nevertheless not of a type to cause the institutions to 
be classed as benevolent in any such sense as is used 
in this report. The element of self-support through 
income from pay patients has entered into considera¬ 
tion, but this has not been a conclusive test, for not infre¬ 
quently a prosperous hospital with a good balance on 
its ledger is the one to which the poor or needy may 
go with greatest assurance of relief and is popularly 
looked upon as really a benevolent institution. 

CLASSES OF INSTITUTIONS INCLUDED. 

In general the following classes of hospitals and 
sanitariums have been included: (1) Public hospi¬ 
tals and sanitariums supported and conducted by 
federal, state, county, or municipal authorities, except 
those county hospitals which are connected with 
pauper asylums; (2) hospitals and sanitariums sup¬ 
ported and conducted by ecclesiastical, missionary, 
or philanthropic organizations; (3) hospitals and 
sanitariums supported by fraternal or beneficiary 
associations; (4) hospitals and sanitariums owned 
and conducted by private corporations, but held 
under the auspices of some ecclesiastical or benevo¬ 
lent body; and (5) hospitals and sanitariums which 
are owned and conducted by private corporations, but 
which receive patients for free of part-pay treatment, 
of their own motion, on contract with public authori¬ 
ties, or in behalf of some benevolent organization. 


It is of course recognized that with hospitals as 
with educational institutions, the fees charged seldom 
cover the full value of the service rendered. This, 
however, must be taken for granted, and it is believed 
that the list as it stands, if not absolutely complete, 
fairly represents the benevolent contribution of that 
class of institutions. 

The information obtained concerning the hospitals 
and sanitariums covered by this report is presented 
in detail, together with the local addresses of the 
institutions on pages 268 to 375. Table 38 sum¬ 
marizes the principal statistics by geographic divisions 
and states. 

MEDICAL AND NURSING STAFF. 

It is noticeable that only 60 per cent of the hospitals 
and sanitariums make any report of resident physi¬ 
cians. Tliis is due partly to the failure of a large 
number to make any full report and partly to the 
fact that a considerable number, especially of the 
smaller hospitals, have no resident physicians, but are« 
each under the care of a superintendent or head nurse, 
medical supervision being given by physicians who 
were resident in the locality, and who might be and 
sometimes were designated as visiting physicians. 
There were, however, a number of cases in which the 
entire medical fraternity of a town or city were re¬ 
turned as visiting physicians, so that to give a total 
under that head would be misleading. It will be 
noted that the average number of resident physicians 
for each hospital and sanitarium was nearly 5, while 
according to the report for 1904 the average, if all the 
hospitals made reports, was only 2. 

The number of hospitals maintaining training 
schools for nurses has increased from 867 to 1,118, 
representing the same proportion of the entire num¬ 
ber of hospitals as in 1904. The average number of 
nurses per hospital or sanitarium, however, has ad¬ 
vanced from 15 to 20. 
























HOSPITALS AND SANITARIUMS. 


47 


The number of beds was reported for the first time 
at the census of 1910, so that comparisons with 1904 
can not be made for this item. 

PATIENTS REPORTED. 

It is noticeable that 202 of the hospitals reported 
gave no report of the number of inmates at the close 
of the year. A considerable number of these, espe¬ 
cially municipal hospitals for contagious diseases, had 
no inmates, but in the great majority of cases the lack 
was evidently due to a failure to make returns. The 
report for 1904 states that a number of institutions 
failed to report inmates at the close of the year, but 
does not give any figures, so that comparison in this 
respect is scarcely possible. The fact that the num¬ 
ber of hospitals reporting the number of persons 
treated during the year is much larger than that of 
the hospitals reporting the number of inmates at the 
close of the year is explained partly by the fact that 
even those that had no inmates at a given date treated 
patients at some time during the year, and is also 
partly due to the fact that while hospitals usually 
record the incoming and outgoing patients a current 
daily report is seldom kept. 

The returns for the financial items are the least 
satisfactory of any obtained. Only 79.5 per cent of 
the total number of hospitals and sanitariums reported 
gave the amounts received, only 78.6 per cent gave 
expenditures, and only 73.8 per cent gave the 
value of property. Some of the federal hospitals did 
not make any separate reports under the different 
heads, and in the case of the army post hospitals it 
was often impracticable to give any valuation to the 
hospital property as distinct from the other property 
of the post. In other cases also hospital property 
seemed to be so involved with other property that a 
separate statement was impracticable. 

The following statement shows the distribution by 
geographic divisions of the number of hospitals and 
sanitariums, the number of beds reported, the num¬ 
ber of inmates at the close of the year, and the number 
of patients treated during the year, the averages per 
hospital also being given for the last three items: 


Table 37 

DIVISION. 

AVERAGE PER HOS¬ 
PITAL OR SANITARIUM 

reporting: 1910. 

RANK IN 1910 IN 


Num¬ 
ber of 
beds. 

Num¬ 
ber 
of pa¬ 
tients 
at 

close 
of the 
year. 

Num¬ 
ber 
of pa¬ 
tients 
treated 
during 
the 
year. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
hos¬ 
pitals 
and 
sani¬ 
tari¬ 
ums. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
beds. 

Num¬ 
ber 
of pa¬ 
tients 
at 

close 
of the 
year. 

Num¬ 
ber 
of pa¬ 
tients 
treated 
during 
the 
year. 

New England. 

74 

51 

993 

4 

4 

3 

3 

Middle Atlantic. 

109 

78 

1,402 

1 

1 

1 

1 

East North Central. 

82 

51 

1.073 

2 

2 

2 

2 

West North Central. 

69 

44 

757 

3 

3 

4 

4 

South Atlantic. 

67 

38 

861 

5 

5 

5 

5 

East South Central. 

71 

43 

869 

9 

9 

9 

9 

West South Central. 

93 

55 

1,257 

8 

8 

8 

7 

Mountain. 

66 

42 

627 

7 

7 

7 

8 

Pacific. 

78 

56 

1,141 

6 

6 

6 

6 


The ratio between the number of hospitals and 
sanitariums and the population for the respective 
geographic divisions was as follows: 


Mountain. One hospital or sanitarium to every 23,725 inhabitants. 

New England. One hospital or sanitarium to every 28,244 inhabitants. 

Pacific. One hospital or sanitarium to every 36,775 inhabitants. 

Middle Atlantic. One hospital or sanitarium to every 38,631 inhabitants. 

West North Central.. One hospital or sanitarium to every 45,461 inhabitants. 
East North Central... One hospital or sanitarium to every 48,028 inhabitants. 

South Atlantic. One hospital or sanitarium to every 63,186 inhabitants. 

West South Central.. One hospital or sanitarium to every 125,493 inhabitants. 
East South Central... One hospital or sanitarium to every 135,644 inhabitants. 


The high rank of the Mountain and Pacific divisions 
is noticeable. 

The number of persons treated per 100,000 of the to¬ 
tal population, by geographic divisions, was as follows: 


DIVISION. 

Number. 

New England. 

6,023 
3,564 
2,911 
2,405 
2,163 

Middle Atlantic. 

Pacific . 

Mountain. 

East North Central. 


U 554 

South Atlantic. 

R 293 

West South Central. 

844 

East South Central. 

568 



DISPENSARIES. 

Among the questions asked of each hospital was one 
as to the operation of a dispensary in connection with 
the hospital. Whenever the answer was in the affirma¬ 
tive, special inquiry was made to learn (1) whether the 
dispensary was practically distinct in its operation 
from the hospital, in which case a separate report was 
called for; (2) whether it was practically the out¬ 
patient department of the hospital, and so identified 
with it as not to permit of a separate report, in which 
case the number of persons treated in the dispensary, 
if given, was put in a footnote; or (3) whether it was 
really only a pharmacy, in which case it was omitted 
from the report. In a number of cases it appeared 
that no exact distinction was made by the hospital 
between bed-patients and out-patients. So far as 
possible, especially when the number of persons re¬ 
ported as inmates at the close of the year exceeded the 
number of beds, special effort was made to learn the 
exact situation, but not always with satisfactory re¬ 
sults. In the main, however, the figures in the general 
tables and the accompanying summaries for inmates 
and for persons received during the year refer to bed- 
patients, the out-patients being reported in connection 
with the dispensaries. 

TREATMENT OF TUBERCULOSIS. 

A most important feature of hospital development 
has been the special attention given to the treatment 
of tuberculosis. Table 39 shows the number of hos¬ 
pitals and sanitariums and of dispensaries which 
reported special arrangements for such treatment. 
The most noticeable single feature is the number of 
dispensaries in Pennsylvania, most of these being re¬ 
cently established state dispensaries. 


















































1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 

9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 

21 

22 

23 

24 

25 

26 

27 

28 

29 

30 

31 

32 

33 

34 

35 

36 

37 

38 

39 

40 

41 

42 

43 

44 

45 

46 

47 

48 

49 

50 

51 

52 

53 

54 

55 

56 

57 

58 

59 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


GENERAL SUMMARY OF STATISTICS FOR HOSPITALS 


Total 
num¬ 
ber of 
insti¬ 
tutions 
re¬ 
ported. 


1,918 


232 

500 

380 

256 

193 

62 

70 

111 

114 


21 

26 

11 

129 

17 

28 


253 

63 

184 


81 

51 

132 

66 

50 


69 

52 

57 

11 

9 

23 

35 


5 

43 

16 

29 

16 

31 

9 

27 

17 


25 
16 
11 
10 


15 

12 

6 

37 


16 

6 

6 

45 

19 

12 

7 


36 

12 

66 



RESIDENT 

PHYSICIANS. 

Train¬ 

ing 

schools 

for 

nurses 

re¬ 

ported. 

NURSES IN SERVICE AT 
OF THE YEAR. 

CLOSE 

BEDS. 

PATIENTS AT CLOSE OF THE YEAR. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
insti¬ 
tutions 
report¬ 
ing. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
physi¬ 
cians re¬ 
ported. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
insti¬ 
tutions 
report¬ 
ing. 

Total 
number 
of nurses 
reported. 1 

With sex 
reported. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
insti¬ 
tutions 
report¬ 
ing. 

Number 
of beds 
reported. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
insti¬ 
tutions 
report¬ 
ing. 

Total 

number 

of 

patients 

re¬ 

ported. 1 

Adults. 

Male. 

Female. 

Total. 1 

W ith sex 
reported. 

Male. 

Female. 


1,155 

5,339 

1,118 

1,814 

35,617 

3,581 

32.004 

1,858 

155,838 

1,716 

96.390 

72,948 

41,054 

30,915 


122 

512 

142 

218 

4,376 

406 

3,960 

223 

16,551 

209 

10,643 

8,293 

4,201 

4,092 


336 

1,539 | 

324 

486 

11,667 

882 

10,763 

494 

53,659 

469 

36,789 

28.035 

15,575 

12,259 


203 

1,144 

229 

367 

7,633 

836 

6,823 

375 

30,787 

347 

17,797 

1.3,899 

7,201 

6,499 


151 

867 

148 

236 

4,038 

404 

3,634 

245 

17,012 

223 

9,908 

6,974 

3,773 

2,675 


131 

460 

120 

183 

2,918 

323 

2,595 

184 

12,258 

165 

6,311 

4,806 

2,812 

1,941 


35 

121 

36 

54 

717 

70 

647 

58 

4,133 

51 

2,206 

1,448 

800 

648 


50 

240 

34 

65 

1,097 

176 

921 

63 

5,859 

59 

3,265 

1,712 

1,270 

442 


57 

210 

31 

100 

1,172 

214 

958 

106 

7,027 

98 

4,112 

3,334 

2,428 

906 


70 

246 

54 

105 

1,999 

270 

1,703 

110 

8,552 

95 

5,359 

4,447 

2,994 

1,453 


15 

39 

12 

21 

298 

30 

258 

21 

1,094 

18 

584 

447 

239 

208 


10 

36 

18 

24 

284 

14 

270 

25 

810 

23 

419 

361 

179 

182 


5 

21 

8 

11 

181 

25 

156 

11 

449 

10 

282 

226 

94 

132 


64 

316 

75 

119 

2,630 

252 

2,378 

124 

10,277 

116 

6,770 

5,170 

2,549 

2,621 


12 

45 

8 

16 

399 

74 

325 

15 

1.335 

15 

909 

612 

379 

233 


16 

55 

21 

27 

584 

11 

573 

27 

2,586 

27 

1,679 

1,477 

761 

716 


176 

953 

149 

248 

6,735 

590 

6,144 

252 

31,577 

241 

22,998 

17,715 

9,931 

7,583 


41 

129 

36 

58 

1,102 

135 

946 

60 

5,070 

54 

3,381 

2,249 

1,239 

1,010 


119 

457 

139 

180 

3,830 

157 

3,673 

182 

17.012 

174 

10,410 

8,071 

4,405 

3,666 


42 

209 

57 

77 

1,981 

306 

1,700 

80 

9,211 

74 

6,550 

5,746 

3,151 

2,577 


22 

72 

28 

50 

679 

34 

645 

51 

2,984 

47 

1,440 

1,274 

680 

594 


80 

613 

85 

126 

3,207 

348 

2,859 

129 

11,702 

122 

5,946 

4,315 

2,137 

2,171 


36 

170 

35 

65 

977 

96 

881 

65 

3,773 

58 

2,114 

1.575 

697 

704 


23 

80 

24 

49 

789 

52 

738 

50 

3,117 

46 

1,747 

989 

536 

453 


41 

256 

35 

64 

1,117 

66 

1,051 

66 

4,522 

62 

2,839 

2,107 

982 

795 


26 

202 

34 

47 

799 

26 

773 

50 

3,045 

44 

1,884 

943 

497 

374 


41 

205 

35 

54 

1.126 

201 

925 

55 

5,205 

53 

3,224 

2,427 

1,531 

849 


6 

19 

6 

10 

93 

7 

86 

10 

349 

7 

87 

79 

46 

33 


3 

4 

5 

9 

122 

15 

107 

9 

405 

6 

112 

96 

43 

53 


15 

54 

12 

21 

382 

33 

349 

22 

1,609 

21 

891 

613 

299 

269 


19 

127 

21 

31 

399 

56 

343 

33 

1,877 

30 

871 

709 

375 

302 


3 

5 

3 

5 

55 

12 

43 

5 

218 

5 

137 

102 

58 

44 


36 

179 

29 

41 

917 

77 

840 

42 

3,721 

37 

2,207 

1,511 

779 

702 


16 

89 

9 

16 

436 

43 

393 

16 

1,888 

15 

977 

715 

427 

288 


15 

55 

20 

26 

473 

69 

404 

27 

1,996 

26 

1,018 

890 

621 

269 


9 

18 

14 

16 

210 

9 

201 

16 

991 

15 

473 

435 

284 

151 


13 

21 

20 

30 

307 

27 

280 

30 

1,096 

26 

550 

392 

197 

195 


6 

16 

5 

9 

128 

34 

94 

9 

445 

5 

141 

121 

74 

24 


22 

62 

13 

24 

301 

15 

2S6 

23 

1,326 

20 

602 

455 

233 

222 


11 

15 

7 

16 

91 

37 

54 

16 

577 

16 

206 

185 

139 

46 


15 

53 

14 

23 

306 

28 

278 

25 

2,057 

22 

923 

655 

356 

299 


11 

41 

10 

14 

193 

10 

183 

15 

1,030 

13 

500 

331 

140 

191 


6 

14 

5 

7 

109 

9 

100 

9 

560 

7 

371 

229 

150 

79 


3 

13 

7 

10 

109 

23 

86 

9 

486 

9 

412 

233 

154 

79 


10 

31 

5 

14 

182 

70 

112 

14 

961 

11 

371 

329 

256 

73 


9 

58 

7 

12 

286 

12 

274 

12 

1,763 

12 

1,372 

410 

254 

156 


4 

5 

3 

4 

61 

19 

42 

4 

302 

5 

94 

17 

15 

2 


27 

146 

19 

35 

568 

75 

493 

33 

2,833 

31 

1,428 

956 

745 

211 


6 

16 

7 

14 

183 

31 

152 

16 

1,004 

14 

440 

323 

241 

82 


3 

8 

2 

6 

53 

11 

42 

6 

348 

5 

153 

145 

84 

61 


4 

15 

1 

5 

41 

27 

14 

5 

259 

5 

155 

148 

134 

14 


24 

111 

15 

41 

566 

80 

486 

42 

3,249 

41 

2,171 

1,695 

1,129 

566 


10 

39 

1 

17 

82 

13 

69 

19 

1,193 

19 

792 

712 

617 

95 


5 

12 

1 

10 

88 

33 

55 

11 

474 

8 

174 

140 

99 

41 


5 

9 

4 

7 

159 

19 

140 

7 

500 

6 

227 

171 

124 

47 


18 

37 

17 

34 

534 

113 

421 

36 

2,556 

33 

1,370 

1,212 

791 

421 


7 

18 

8 

12 

249 

18 

231 

12 

1,158 

12 

973 

916 

562 

354 


45 

191 

29 

59 

1,216 

139 

1,051 

62 

4,838 

50 

3,016 

2,319 

1,641 

678 


1 Including those whose sex was not reported. 
















































































































































HOSPITALS AND SANITARIUMS 


49 


AND SANITARIUMS, BY DIVISIONS AND STATES: 1910. 


PATIENTS AT CLOSE OF THE 

year— continued. 

PATIENTS TREATED DURING THE YEAR. 

RECEIPTS DURING THE 
YEAR. 

PAYMENTS DURING THE 
YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF THE YEAR. 


Children. 

Number 

Total 

With sex reported. 

Number 













Number 


Number 






of insti- 

number of 



of insti- 

Amount 

of insti- 

Amount 

of insti- 

Amount 



w ltn sex reported. 

tutions 

patients 



tutions 

reported. 

tutions 

reported. 

tutions 

reported. 


Total. 1 



reporting. 

reported. 1 

Male. 

Female. 

reporting. 


reporting. 


reporting. 




Male. 

Female. 












12,356 

6,087 

5,679 

1,829 

1,953,309 

982,096 

715,841 

1,524 

*66,213,435 

1,507 

*61,330,047 

1,415 

*306,021,539 

1 

1,538 

753 

724 

226 

224,432 

111,068 

94,991 

195 

8,642,451 

192 

7,960,852 

181 

50.380,111 

2 

6,522 

3,421 

3,068 

491 

688,346 

348,710 

273,252 

444 

24,725,505 

449 

25,921,582 

420 

149,544,928 

3 

2,033 

885 

864 

368 

394,687 

155,887 

141,786 

322 

15,890,287 

311 

10,436,202 

284 

41,645.965 

4 

958 

398 

415 

239 

180,891 

94,699 

64,874 

194 

5,667,254 

186 

5,389,486 

187 

19,167,616 

5 

547 

236 

244 

183 

157,652 

83,604 

52,023 

145 

3,946,431 

144 

4,113,960 

132 

22,877,936 

6 

172 

71 

101 

55 

47, 779 

21,410 

19,283 

42 

794,627 

42 

811,541 

41 

2,696.709 

7 

89 

52 

37 

59 

74,141 

47,303 

14,891 

41 

1,205,427. 

41 

1,128,600 

40 

4,667,722 

8 

125 

65 

60 

101 

63,343 

38,290 

20,540 

64 

1,903,875 

68 

2,095,802 

67 

6,117,155 

9 

372 

206 

166 

107 

122,038 

81,125 

34,201 

77 

3,437,578 

74 

3,472,022 

63 

8,923,397 

10 

65 

31 

34 

21 

12,994 

6,898 

6,068 

16 

381,037 

15 

417,515 

15 

1,979,958 

11 

58 

26 

26 

25 

7,539 

3,688 

3,436 

21 

294,924 

23 

326,195 

22 

1,666,744 

12 

16 

9 

7 

11 

5,553 

2,922 

2,263 

10 

195,585 

9 

173,9S1 

8 

1,083,949 

13 

1.040 

523 

517 

125 

153,778 

74,153 

63,580 

111 

5,530,390 

107 

5,294,332 

107 

38,305,467 

14 

179 

82 

60 

16 

17,724 

10,032 

7,617 

12 

538,580 

13 

633,859 

8 

1.679,205 

15 

180 

82 

80 

28 

26,844 

13,375 

12,027 

25 

1,701,935 

25 

1,114,970 

21 

5,664,788 

16 

4,649 

2,458 

2,183 

250 

397,078 

* 206,797 

164,503 

216 

15,039,231 

220 

15.728,357 

207 

92,798,979 

17 

581 

301 

280 

60 

68,531 

37.723 

27.596 

56 

1,836,565 

55 

1,996,724 

52 

6,764,064 

18 

1,292 

662 

605 

181 

222, 737 

104,190 

81.153 

172 

7,849,709 

174 

8,196,501 

161 

49,981,885 

19 

676 

337 

329 

78 

87,350 

46,068 

38,003 

76 

3,083,295 

75 

3,053,410 

70 

16,142,209 

20 

95 

56 

39 

49 

25,506 

13,298 

12,208 

43 

1.777,203 

39 

732,943 

38 

2,614,897 

21 

696 

287 

302 

128 

126.198 

58.938 

56,524 

113 

8,752,227 

110 

4,438,790 

95 

14,450,117 

22 

344 

121 

110 

63 

118,333 

19,525 

19.069 

54 

1,474,397 

50 

1,348,357 

49 

4,750,472 

23 

222 

84 

84 

50 

37,300 

18,058 

15,982 

36 

803,165 

37 

862,702 

32 

3,688,270 

24 

345 

100 

137 

65 

51,122 

24,233 

20,618 

59 

1,985,310 

56 

1,809,900 

56 

5,180,151 

25 

147 

76 

68 

49 

27,209 

10,800 

10,141 

42 

846,526 

38 

824,149 

36 

2.844,660 

26 

217 

108 

75 

55 

63.248 

38,815 

20,675 

45 

1,864,073 

45 

1,740,489 

42 

7,615,168 

27 

8 

6 

2 

9 

3,564 

1,094 

1,060 

6 

59,490 

5 

56,053 

6 

223,033 

28 

16 

9 

7 

8 

4,116 

1,385 

1,544 

7 

121,401 

7 

126,877 

7 

222.835 

29 

147 

73 

74 

22 

14,361 

7,826 

5,981 

11 

227.126 

12 

261,051 

15 

1,072,327 

30 

78 

26 

52 

31 

17,271 

10,546 

4,855 

24 

563,328 

23 

570,967 

25 

2,009.442 

31 

35 

21 

14 

5 

1,981 

1,169 

812 

4 

52,614 

4 

93,719 

4 

391.943 

32 

217 

69 

81 

43 

41,238 

15,528 

14,492 

35 

1,526,938 

34 

1,607.469 

30 

9,792.899 

33 

101 

51 

50 

16 

49,057 

30,681 

14,455 

12 

604,482 

12 

617.652 

10 

7,029.787 

34 

53 

26 

27 

26 

18,121 

9,515 

4,986 

22 

475,451 

21 

530,747 

22 

1,696,597 

35 

25 

11 

14 

16 

9,406 

5,736 

3,670 

14 

288,590 

13 

268,293 

14 

904,260 

36 

15 

9 

6 

29 

10,251 

5,005 

4,573 

23 

364,630 

23 

328.419 

21 

1,448.853 

37 

20 

12 

8 

8 

4,436 

2,021 

1,483 

6 

110,207 

6 

112,565 

5 

312,035 

38 

70 

30 

40 

24 

16,950 

8,895 

6,544 

18 

410,965 

19 

426,754 

15 

716,222 

39 

11 

7 

4 

16 

6,212 

5,054 

1,008 

11 

112,554 

12 

128,342 

11 

585,340 

40 

114 

38 

76 

25 

15,283 

7,517 

6,588 

21 

408.912 

20 

416,496 

20 

1,368.209 

41 

24 

12 

12 

15 

13,567 

4,396 

4,212 

11 

215,228 

10 

190.086 

10 

529,500 

42 

15 

7 

8 

7 

6,611 

3,308 

2,622 

3 

70,486 

4 

98,146 

3 

502,000 

43 

19 

14 

5 

8 

12,318 

6,189 

5,861 

7 

100,001 

8 

106,813 

8 

297,000 

44 

42 

25 

17 

13 

11,221 

8,540 

1,435 

9 

191,951 

10 

184,044 

11 

425.200 

45 

30 

18 

12 

11 

21,275 

12,725 

7,409 

9 

499,278 

9 

471,053 

7 

2,550,942 

46 




4 

2,878 

990 

191 

3 

31,957 

3 

30,509 

2 

30,250 

47 

17 

9 

8 

31 

38,767 

25,048 

5,856 

20 

482,241 

19 

442,994 

20 

1,661.330 

48 

37 

17 

20 

16 

20,669 

12,757 

7,912 

10 

201,281 

10 

331,648 

11 

978,245 

49 

8 

6 

2 

6 

2,645 

1,524 

1,121 

4 

47,120 

5 

78,408 

4 

248,583 

50 

7 

3 

4 

5 

2,683 

2,371 

312 

2 

20.961 

2 

19,912 

2 

60,200 

51 

61 

31 

30 

41 

25,145 

13,719 

7,613 

25 

900,450 

27 

954,293 

25 

2.652,793 

52 

6 

3 

3 

17 

3.627 

2.436 

491 

12 

320,089 

13 

322,139 

13 

845.338 

53 

4 

3 

1 

9 

2,069 

1.691 

378 

6 

211,393 

6 

185,907 

6 

391,183 

54 

2 

2 


7 

6,505 

3.792 

2,713 

5 

202,581 

5 

203,495 

6 

940.813 

55 

56 

107 

62 

45 

35 

29,891 

19,474 

10,417 

24 

634,420 

23 

685,213 

17 

1,417,470 

57 

57 

31 

26 

12 

13,814 

8,501 

5.313 

8 

533,039 

9 

548,028 

9 

1,413.450 

58 

208 

113 

95 

60 

78,333 

53,150 

18,471 

45 

2,270,119 

42 

2,238,781 

37 

6,092.477 

59 


44153°—14-4 


/ 

































































50 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

INSTITUTIONS FOR TREATMENT OF TUBERCULAR PATIENTS: 1910. 


Table 39 

TOTAL. 

HOSPITALS AND 
SANITARIUMS. 

DISPENSARIES. 


TOTAL. 

HOSPITALS and 

1 SANITARIUMS. 

DISPENSARIES. 

DIVISION OR STATE. 

Num¬ 

ber. 

Number 
of persons 
treated. 

Num¬ 

ber. 

Number 
of persons 
treated. 

Num¬ 

ber. 

Number 
of persons 
treated. 

DIVISION OR STATE. 

Num¬ 

ber. 

Number 
of persons 
treated. 

Num¬ 

ber. 

Number 
of persons 
treated. 

Num¬ 

ber. 

Number 
of persons 
treated. 

United States. 

318 

91,178 

152 

30,736 

166 

60,442 

South Atlantic—C on. 









2 

828 

729 

1 

3 

465 

210 

1 

3 

363 

519 

New England. 

31 

7,640 

27 

4,621 

7 

3,019 

Virginia. 

6 




1 

5 

156 

369 

78 


1 

156 

Maine. 

1 

230 

1 

230 

73 



North Carolina. 

5 

369 

New Hampshire. 

2 

73 

2 



South Carolina. 

2 

1 

17 

1 

61 

Vermont..*.. 

1 

141 

1 

141 



Georgia. 

4 

891 

2 

105 

2 

786 

Massachusetts.... 

21 

5,734 

732 

14 

4 

2,715 

7 

3,019 

Florida.. . 





Rhode Island. 

4 

'732 









Connecticut. 

5 

730 

5 

730 



East South Central. 

7 

1,124 

4 

235 

3 

889 











Middle Atlantic. 

178 

60,564 

39 

12,928 

139 

47,636 

Kentucky. 

4 

1,043 

2 

154 

2 

889 



2 

81 ; 

1 

1 

81 

1 

( l ) 

New York. 

38 

26,765 

19 

7,432 

697 

19 

19,333 

Alabama. 

1 


New Jersey. 

6 

697 

6 

Mississippi. 





Pennsylvania. 

134 

33,102 

14 

4,799 

120 

28,303 









West South Central. 

7 

288 

6 

288 

1 


East North Central. 

23 

7,881 

18 

3,357 


4,524 








1 

2 

98 

35 

1 

1 

98 

35 



Ohio. 

8 

5,263 

5 

1,535 

390 

3 

3,728 

Louisiana. 

1 

0) 

Indiana. 

4 

'390 

4 


Oklahoma. 


Illinois. 

3 

448 

3 

448 



Texas. 

4 

155 

4 

155 



Michigan. 

6 

1,386 

4 

590 

2 

796 






Wisconsin. 

2 

'394 

2 

394 


Mountain. 

22 

3,971 

22 

3,971 












West North Central. 

14 

3,805 

12 

1,996 

2 

1,809 

Montana. 
















Minnesota. 

7 

1 115 

6 

662 

1 

453 

Wyoming. 







Iowa. 

3 

'395 

3 

395 


Colorado... 

13 

2,376 

1,535 

13 

2,376 

1,535 

60 



Missouri. 

4 

2,295 

3 

939 

1 

1,356 

New Mexico. 

8 

8 



North Dakota. 




Arizona. 

1 

60 

1 



South Dakota. 







Utah. 




Nebraska. 







Nevada. 







Kansas. 





















Pacific . 

6 

397 

6 

397 




27 

5,508 

18 

2,943 

9 

2,565 















Delaware. 

2 

766 

1 

86 

1 

680 

Oregon. 

2 

195 

2 

195 



Maryland. 

5 

1,691 

5 

1,691 

California. 

4 

202 

4 

202 














1 Not reported. 


Class V.—DISPENSARIES. 


In this class are included those institutions, vari¬ 
ously termed dispensaries, clinics, or infirmaries, 
where medical or surgical treatment may be obtained 
gratuitously or at a nominal price, but which do not 
receive resident patients. Such institutions are oper¬ 
ated either independently or in connection with some 
hospital or medical college. In the case of those 
connected with hospitals the dispensary, or clinic as 
it is usually termed, is practically the out-patient 
department of the hospital, i. e., the department 
which treats patients who do not occupy beds in the 
hospital. Sometimes these clinics are so thoroughly 
organized and so distinct from the hospital with 
which they are connected as to be practically separate 
organizations; on the other hand, they are often so 
intimately connected, not only occupying the same 
building, but served by the same medical and nursing 
staff, that hospital and dispensary are practically one 
institution. 

There are also cases where the dispensary or clinic, 
as it is often called, is little more than a pharmacy, 
where patients can obtain medicines on the order of 
some physician, whether connected with the hospital 
or not. Dispensaries of this type are not included. 

The questions asked covered the number of persons 
on the medical and nursing staff at the close of the 
year, the number of treatments given, the number of 


different persons treated during the year, and the 
same financial inquiries as for the other classes of 
institutions covered by the present report. 

The returns, so far at least as statistical presenta¬ 
tion is concerned, can scarcely be considered as satis¬ 
factory. Only about one-third of the dispensaries 
made any financial report at all. This is due partly 
to the fact that in the case of many dispensaries 
identified with hospitals, the financial reports for the 
hospitals covered the dispensaries also; a notable 
instance being the case of the Pennsylvania State 
Dispensaries for treatment of tuberculosis, whose 
financial statistics are included in the report of a 
single sanitarium, in the hospital table. In other 
cases the dispensaries seemed to be on such an informal 
basis that records of any kind were very incomplete. 

In reporting the number on the medical staff at the 
close of the year there appears to have been no uniform 
basis adopted by the dispensaries, one institution 
reporting 245, while in other cases the numbers re¬ 
ported were 183, 174, 121, 80, etc. The majority of 
these dispensaries were connected with medical col¬ 
leges, and the students seem to have been registered as 
attendant physicians. 

The greatest difficulty, however, came in connection 
with the effort to distinguish between treatments given 
and persons treated. It was impossible, even with 






































































































































DISPENSARIES 


51 


repeated correspondence, to obtain satisfactory in¬ 
formation on this point. In many cases but one of 
these two questions was answered—sometimes one, 
sometimes the other—and not infrequently the same 
figures were given in answer to both questions. So 
very unsatisfactory was the result that no column 
showing “treatments during the year” has been given 
in the general tables, though such information as the 
schedules furnished has been included in the summary 
table. Table 40 presents, by geographic divisions, the 
total number of persons reported as treated, and the 
total number of treatments given. 

Another difficulty arose from a doubt in some cases 
as to whether the hospitals reporting always made 
the distinction between out-patients and bed-patients. 
Some undoubtedly made this distinction, others ap¬ 
parently did not, but the situation was not sufficiently 
clear to warrant a distinct statement. In the main, 
however, as stated in connection with the summary 


for hospitals, the figures there given are for bed- 
patients, while those in this table are for out-patients. 


Table 40 

DIVISION. 

Number of 
persons 
treated: 
1910. 

Number of 
treatments 
given dining 
the year: 
1910. 

United States. 

2,440,018 

6,737,152 

Middle Atlantic. 

1,710,068 
195,815 
175,648 
139,169 
77,607 
50,908 
39,813 
28,911 
22,079 

4,464,823 

585,394 

604,547 

382,599 

389,670 

119,215 

70,536 

85,390 

34,978 

East North Central. 

New England. 

South Atlantic. 

West North Central. 

West South Central. 

Mountain. 

Pacific. 

East South Central. 



A general summary of the statistics of dispensaries 
as reported is given in Table 42, and Table 41 shows 
by geographic divisions and states the number of 
dispensaries operated by hospitals and those operated 
independently, together with the number of persons 
treated in them. 


DISPENSARIES OPERATED BY HOSPITALS OR INDEPENDENTLY: 1910. 


Table 41 

INSTITUTIONS 

REPORTED. 

PERSONS TREATED. 

DIVISION OR STATE. 

Total. 

Oper¬ 

ated 

by 

hos¬ 

pitals. 

Oper¬ 

ated 

inde¬ 

pend¬ 

ently. 

Total. 

In hos¬ 
pital dis¬ 
pensaries. 

In inde¬ 
pendent 
dispen¬ 
saries. 

United States . 

574 

229 

345 

2,440,018 

1,405,448 

1,034,570 


New England. 

45 

17 

28 

175,648 

94,753 

80,895 


Maine. 

1 


1 

1,212 


1,212 

New Hampshire. 






Vermont.. 







Massachuset t s. 

34 

12 

22 

147,071 
18,577 
8,788 

76,176 
17,577 

70,895 

1,000 

Rhode Island. 

5 

4 

1 

Connecticut. 

5 

1 

4 

1,000 

7", 788 

Middle Atlantic. 

342 

143 

199 

1,710,068 

1,049,406 

660,662 


New York. 

126 

66 

60 

1,242,679 

701,147 

38,651 

309,608 

541,532 

New Jersey. 

20 

12 

8 

57,662 

19i011 

100,119 

Pennsylvan ia. 

196 

65 

131 

409,727 




East North Central. 

64 

19 

45 

195,815 

59,175 

136,640 

Ohio. 

19 

7 

12 

56,239 

22,812 

33,427 

Indiana. 

4 

1 

3 

11,696 

150 

11,546 

Illinois. 

30 

8 

22 

115,155 

32,934 

82,221 

Michigan. 

8 

3 

5 

7,235 

3,279 

3,956 


3 


3 

5,490 

5,490 

34,927 

West North Central.... 

34 

14 

20 

77,607 

42,680 

Minnesota. 

5 

r 7 

3 

18,821 

13,428 

5,393 


2 

i 

1 

2,026 

50,474 


2,026 

21,222 

Missouri. 

24 

10 

14 

29,252 







1 

1 






1 

1 

5,780 


5,780 


1 


1 

506 


"506 

South Atlantic. 

55 

25 

30 

139,169 

78,925 

60,244 







Delaware. 

3 

2 

1 

1,381 

701 

680 

Maryland. 

20 

10 

10 

81,730 

40,150 

41,580 








DIVISION OR STATE. 


South Atlantic—C on. 
District of Columbia. 

Virginia. 

West Virginia. 

North Carolina. 

South Carolina. 

Georgia. 

Florida. 


East South Central. 


Kentucky. 
Tennessee.. 
Alabama... 
Mississippi. 


West South Central. 


Arkansas.. 
Louisiana.. 
Oklahoma. 
Texas. 


Mountain. 


Montana.... 

Idaho. 

Wyoming... 

Colorado. 

New Mexico. 

Arizona. 

Utah. 

Nevada. 


Pacific. 


Washington. 

Oregon. 

California.... 


INSTITUTIONS 

REPORTED. 


Total. 


13 

7 

2 

3 

3 

4 


10 


Oper¬ 

ated 

by 

hos¬ 

pitals. 


Oper¬ 

ated 

inde¬ 

pend¬ 

ently. 


PERSONS TREATED. 


Total. 


29,551 

16,798 

652 

2,533 

1,279 

5,245 


22,079 


15,643 

4,136 

2,300 


50,908 


589 

24,968 


25,351 

39,813 


1,936 


1,200 

900 

35,777 


28,911 


640 

1,967 

26,304 


In hos¬ 
pital dis¬ 
pensaries. 


21,768 

9,968 

496 

1,383 


4,459 


16,779 


14,479 
' '2,'300 


19,940 


589 


19,351 

37,713 


1,936 


35,777 


6,077 


640 
'5,’437' 


In inde¬ 
pendent 
dispen¬ 
saries. 


7,783 

6,830 

156 

1,150 

1,279 

786 


5,300 


1,164 
4,136 


30,968 


24,968 

'’6,066 
2,100 


1,200 

900 


22,834 


1,967 

20,867 






























































































































































































52 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

GENERAL SUMMARY OF STATISTICS FOR DISPENSARIES, BY DIVISIONS AND STATES: 1910 


Table 42 

DIVISION OR STATE. 

Total 
num¬ 
ber of 
insti¬ 
tu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ed. 

Num¬ 
ber on 
medi¬ 
cal 

staff at 
close 
of the 
year. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
nurses 
at close 
of the 
year. 

Number of 
treatments 
given dur¬ 
ing the 
year. 

PERSONS TREATED 

DURING THE YEAR. 

RECEIPTS DURING 
THE YEAR. 

PAYMENTS DURING 
THE YEAR. 

VALUE OF 
PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF 

THE YEAR. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
insti¬ 
tu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Total 

number 

reported . 1 

With sex 

Male. 

reported. 

Female. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
insti¬ 
tu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Amount 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
insti¬ 
tu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Amount 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
insti¬ 
tu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Amount 

reported. 

United States. 

574 

7,444 

1,604 

6,737,152 

508 

2,440,018 

946,131 

883,347 

180 

§1,069,613 

191 

$1,593,140 

119 

$5,720,052 

Geographic divisions: 















New England. 

45 

629 

126 

604,547 

39 

175,648 

65,461 

79,741 

25 

103,107 

28 

110,017 

13 

601,270 

Middle Atlantic. 

342 

4,365 

870 

4,464,823 

318 

1,710,068 

660,887 

635,411 

72 

408,171 

73 

852,781 

47 

2,831,776 

East North Central. 

64 

1,114 

240 

585,394 

54 

195,815 

86,143 

58,275 

34 

307,908 

36 

339,805 

28 

1,397,081 

West North Central. 

34 

464 

73 

389,670 

27 

77,607 

26,511 

13,003 

15 

133,479 

17 

160,502 

7 

464,350 

South Atlantic. 

55 

515 

206 

382,599 

45 

139,169 

44,788 

58,807 

21 

56,927 

22 

58,276 

16 

143,216 

East South Central. 

9 

48 

24 

34,978 

7 

22,079 

12,375 

9,704 

4 

10,893 

5 

15,130 

2 

125,159 

West South Central. 

9 

54 

31 

119,215 

6 

50,908 

33,809 

17,099 

3 

16,462 

3 

23,809 

2 

17,000 

Mountain. 

6 

10 

6 

70,536 

4 

39,813 

1,400 

700 

1 

200 

1 

200 

1 

60,000 

Pacific. 

10 

245 

28 

85,390 

8 

28,911 

14,757 

10,607 

5 

32,466 

6 

32,620 

3 

80,200 

New England: 















Maine. 

1 

11 

2 

4,138 

1 

1,212 

625 

587 

1 

800 

1 

800 

1 

500 
















Vermont 















Massachusetts. 

34 

502 

108 

521,455 

29 

147,071 

59,369 

73,111 

19 

90,576 

22 

99,120 

10 

581,270 

Rhode Island 

5 

90 

7 

61,652 

4 

18,577 

4,304 

3,892 

1 

1,181 

1 

1,053 



Connecticut. 

5 

26 

9 

17,302 

5 

8,788 

1,163 

2; 151 

4 

10,550 

4 

9; 044 

2 

19,500 

Middle Atlantic: 















New York. 

126 

3,119 

333 

3,124,784 

114 

1,242,679 

484,229 

486,935 

51 

313,124 

51 

323,404 

30 

2,259,176 

New Jersey. 

20 

190 

44 

180,723 

16 

57,662 

26, 204 

22,429 

7 

17,238 

7 

17,305 

3 

51,130 

Pennsylvania. 

196 

1,056 

493 

1,159,316 

188 

409,727 

150,454 

126,047 

14 

77,809 

15 

512,072 

14 

521,470 

East North Central: 















Ohio. 

19 

229 

109 

113,386 

17 

56,239 

33,135 

21,255 

11 

109,395 

11 

94,785 

10 

440,211 

Indiana. 

4 

94 

11 

50,057 

4 

11,696 

9,311 

2,385 

3 

29,019 

3 

25,009 

2 

286,925 

Illinois. 

30 

685 

104 

399,624 

24 

115,155 

38,446 

28,387 

15 

156,167 

17 

211,958 

13 

658,645 

Michigan. 

8 

48 

12 

14,490 

6 

7,235 

2,366 

3,643 

3 

4,881 

3 

4,118 

2 

4,300 

Wisconsin. 

3 

58 

4 

7,837 

3 

5,490 

2,885 

2,605 

2 

8,446 

2 

3,935 

1 

7,000 

West North Central: 















Minnesota. 

5 

67 

5 

29,747 

4 

18,821 

284 

373 

3 

11,790 

4 

11,894 

2 

67,000 

Iowa. 

2 

46 

14 

10,668 

1 

2,026 

1,000 

1,026 

1 

16,750 

1 

46,750 

1 

131,000 

Missouri. 

24 

295 

54 

291,364 

20 

50,474 

21,076 

9,469 

10 

103,939 

10 

97,544 

3 

16,350 

North Dakota. 















South Dakota. 

1 



42,000 











Nebraska. 

1 

42 


13,471 

1 

5,780 

3,855 

1,925 

1 

1,000 

1 

1,200 

1 

250,000 

Kansas. 

1 

14 


2,400 

1 

'506 

'296 

210 



1 

3; 114 



South Atlantic: 














Delaware. 

3 

34 

19 

5,580 

2 

1,381 

625 

756 

1 

10,000 

1 

10,000 

1 

5,000 

Maryland. 

20 

202 

61 

242,994 

14 

81,730 

21,340 

33,923 

7 

12,907 

7 

13,599 

5 

82,366 

District of Columbia. 

13 

166 

79 

54,395 

13 

29,551 

7,351 

13,240 

4 

7,986 

4 

7,606 

4 

5,800 

Virginia. 

7 

49 

14 

32,627 

6 

16,798 

10,478 

6,173 

4 

14,089 

5 

15,076 

3 

5,200 

West Virginia.... 

2 

6 

1 

512 

2 

652 

270 

382 

1 

1,200 

1 

1,200 



North Carolina. 

3 

16 

27 

23.001 

3 

2,533 

1,352 

1,181 

1 

'425 

1 

'425 

1 

40,000 

South Carolina. 

3 

5 

1 

576 

2 

1,279 

421 

S58 

1 

431 

1 

308 

1 

2,850 

Georgia. 

Florida. 

4 

37 

4 

22,914 

3 

5,245 

2,951 

2,294 

2 

9,889 

2 

10,062 

1 

2,000 

East South Central: 















Kentucky. 

4 

31 

24 

21,821 

4 

15,643 

9,725 

5,918 

2 

6,734 

3 

10,939 

1 

159 

Tennessee. 

4 

17 


13,157 

2 

4,136 

1,550 

2,586 

2 

4,159 

2 

4,191 

1 

125,000 

Alabama. 

1 




1 

2 ,300 

Lioo 

1,200 





Mississippi. 














West South Central: 















Arkanas. 

1 

4 

10 

1,415 

1 

589 

589 








Louisiana. 

4 

38 

11 

78,140 

2 

24,968 

11,569 

13,399 

2 

13,462 

2 

20,809 

2 

17,000 

Oklahoma. 















Texas. 

4 

12 

10 

39,660 

3 

25,351 

21,651 

3,700 

1 

3,000 

1 

3,000 



Mountain: 









Montana. 

1 




1 

1,936 









Idaho. 














Wyoming. 















Colorado^. 

1 

3 


2,044 

1 

1,200 

500 

700 

1 

200 

1 

200 

1 

60,000 

New Mexico. 

3 

7 

6 

21,000 

1 

900 

900 







Arizona. 

1 



47,492 

1 

35,777 









Utah. 













Nevada. 















Pacific: 















Washington. 

1 

10 

15 

225 

1 

640 

450 

190 







Oregon. 

1 

15 

1 

3,670 

1 

1,967 

1,550 

417 

1 

822 

1 

413 



California. 

8 

220 

12 

81,495 

6 

26i 304 

12; 757 

10,000 

4 

31,644 

5 

32,207 

3 

80,200 


1 Including those whose sex was not reported 






























































































































































INSTITUTIONS FOR THE BLIND AND DEAF. 


53 


Class VI.—INSTITUTIONS FOR THE BLIND AND DEAF. 


In this class are included those institutions for the 
care, education, and training of blind and deaf persons 
which make special provision for those who are unfitted 
for or unable to meet the expense of purely educa¬ 
tional institutions, whether boarding or day schools. 
The great majority of these institutions are supported 
and conducted by the different state governments, 
and the remainder are mostly under the auspicies of 
benevolent organizations, private or ecclesiastical. 
Day schools and ordinary boarding schools conducted 
on a distinctly business basis are not included. 

The report for 1904 gave simply the total number of 
persons received into and resident in the institution, 
by sex. As will be seen from the following summary, 
this report gives also the number of adults and chil¬ 
dren, classifying them as “Blind only,” “Deaf only,” 
and “Blind and deaf,” and further noting the dis¬ 
tinction between the deaf who wore able to speak 
and those who were unable to speak. 

Seven states—Arizona, Delaware, Nevada, New 
Hampshire, Vermont, Washington, and Wyoming, 
reported no institutions of this class. All these states, 
however, make provision for the training of blind and 


deaf residents of the state in such way as the state 
authorities may judge best. Vermont and New 
Hampshire send most of those for whom they provide 
to private institutions in Massachusetts and Con¬ 
necticut. The western states named frequently make 
arrangements with state institutions of contiguous 
states. There is probably no one class of persons for 
whose education and training such complete provision 
is made as for the blind and deaf. 

Tho following tables show the number of institutions 
under state and private management, respectively, 
together with the number of inmates at the close of 
the year, the amount expended during the year, and 
the value of property at the close of the year for each 
class; also the percentage under these heads. It 
should be said that a considerable number of the 
private institutions, including some large ones under 
the care of the Roman Catholic ecclesiastical bodies, 
declined to furnish the financial information called 
for. In one case the value of property is included in 
the summary tables, though it is not shown in the 
general tables, where it would be identified with the 
particular institution. 


Table 43 


INSTITUTIONS FOB THE BLIND AND DEAF: 


1910. 


DIVISION. 

Number of institutions. 

Inmates at close of the year. 

Payments during the year. 

Value of property at close of the year. 

Total. 

State. 

Private. 

Total. 

State in¬ 
stitutions 

Private 

institu¬ 

tions. 

Total. 

State insti¬ 
tutions. 

Private in¬ 
stitutions. 

Total. 

State insti¬ 
tutions. 

Private in¬ 
stitutions. 

United States. 

New England. 

Middle Atlantic. 

East North Central. 

West North Central. 

South Atlantic. 

East South Central. 

West South Central. 

Mountain. 

125 

72 

53 

15,439 

10,658 

4,781 

So,464,020 

$3,463,937 

$2,000,083 

$33,159,771 

$16,185,0S6 

$16,974,685 

13 
32 
22 
16 

14 
10 

9 

5 

4 

3 

6 

14 

14 

10 

9 

8 

5 

3 

10 

26 

8 

2 

4 

1 

1 

1,120 

3,947 

3,042 

2,045 

1,638 

1,250 

1,606 

478 

313 

326 
612 
2,749 
1,928 
1,474 
1,240 
1,569 
478 
282 

794 

3,335 

293 

117 

164 

10 

37 

471,179 
1,605, 205 

1,173, 044 
669, 929 
408,377 
323,303 
420,071 
270,395 
122,517 

92,838 
208,178 
1,066,189 
653,591 
308,626 
321,532 
420,071 
270,395 
122,517 

378,341 
1,397,027 
106,855 
16,338 
99,751 
1,771 

4,778,445 
12,286,864 

4,449,605 
3,550,028 
2,431,000 
1,608,888 
1,734,700 
863,500 
1,456,741 

246,325 
1,190,497 
4,217,907 
3,209,028 
1,669,500 
1,596,888 
1,734,700 
863,500 
1,456,741 

4,532,120 
11,096,367 
231,698 
341,000 
761,500 
12,000 

Pacific. 

1 

31 




A review of this table shows that the institutions 
under private management are almost entirely in the 
eastern states, chiefly Massachusetts, New York, and 
Illinois, and that they report a large proportion of the 
inmates and finances for those states. One institution 
alone in Massachusetts, the Perkins Institution for the 
Blind, reported 292 of the 794 inmates, $165,699 of the 
$378,341 expended, and $3,299,627 of the $4,217,907 
reported as the value of property for private institu¬ 
tions in that state, and the situation is similar in regard 
to some of the institutions in New York City. In the 
West and South almost the only private institutions 
are those carried on under the auspices of ecclesias¬ 
tical bodies. 


Table 44 


INSTITUTIONS FOR THE BLIND AND DEAF: 1910. 


DIVISION. 

Number of 
institutions. 

Inmates at 
close of 
the year. 

Payments. 

Value of 
property. 

Per 

cent 

state. 

Per 

cent 

pri¬ 

vate. 

Per 

cent 

state. 

Per 

cent 

pri¬ 

vate. 

Per 

cent 

state. 

Per 

cent 

pri¬ 

vate. 

Per 

cent 

state. 

Per 

cent 

pri¬ 

vate. 

United States. 

57.6 

42.4 

69.0 

31.0 

63.4 

36.6 

48.8 

51.2 

New England. 

23.1 

76.9 

29.1 

70.9 

19.7 

80.3 

5.2 

94.8 

Middle Atlantic. 

18.7 

81.3 

15.5 

84.5 

13.0 

87.0 

9.7 

90.3 

East North Central. 

63.6 

36.4 

90.4 

9.6 

90.9 

9. 1 

94.8 

5.2 

West North Central. 

87.5 

12.5 

94.3 

5.7 

97.6 

2.4 

90. 4 

9.6 

South Atlantic. 

71.4 

28.6 

90.0 

10.0 

75.6 

24.4 

68.7 

31.3 

East South Central. 

90.0 

10.0 

99.2 

0.8 

99.5 

0.5 

99.3 

0.7 

West South Central. 

88.9 

11. 1 

97. 7 

2.3 

100. 0 


100.0 


Mountain. 

100.0 


100.0 


100.0 


100.0 


Pacific. 

75.0 

25.0 

90.1 

9.9 

100.0 


100.0 
























































































































1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 

9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 

21 

22 

23 

24 

25 

26 

27 

28 

29 

30 

31 

32 

33 

34 

35 

36 

37 

38 

39 

40 

41 

42 

43 

44 

45 

46 

47 

48 

49 

50 

51 

52 

53 

54 

55 

56 

57 

58 

59 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

GENERAL SUMMARY OF STATISTICS FOR INSTITUTIONS 


Total 
num¬ 
ber of 
insti¬ 
tu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ed. 


125 


13 
32 
22 
16 

14 
10 

9 

5 

4 


18 

3 

11 


TEACHERS AT CLOSE OF 
THE YEAR. 


Num¬ 
ber of 
insti¬ 
tu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 


105 


10 

26 

18 

15 

12 

7 

-I 

4 


15 

3 

8 


Number reported. 


To¬ 

tal. 


1,801 


172 

478 

325 

242 

197 

135 

138 

79 

35 


16 


101 

13 

42 


285 

24 

169 


78 

48 

75 

65 

59 


48 

40 

61 

12 

13 

25 

43 


47 

27 

6 

18 

41 

16 

32 

10 


45 

39 

37 

14 


37 

14 

6 

81 


14 

7 


Male. 


544 


1,257 


23 

108 

102 

91 

66 

53 

56 

29 

16 


12 

1 

8 


61 

6 

41 


18 

16 

22 

21 

25 


16 

16 

23 

5 

4 

9 

18 


31 

4 


23 


4 

31 


14 

15 

3 

5 
12 

6 
7 

4 


12 

13 

23 

5 


17 

5 

3 

31 


11 


2 

14 


Fe¬ 

male 


149 

370 

223 

151 

131 

82 

82 

50 

19 


14 


89 

12 

34 


224 

18 

128 


60 

32 

53 

44 

34 


32 

24 
38 

7 

9 

16 

25 


Nunr 
ber of 
insti¬ 
tu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing 
in¬ 
mates 
at 

close 

of 

the 

year. 


33 

12 

3 

13 

29 

10 

25 

6 


33 

26 

14 

9 


20 

9 

3 

50 


23 

2 


12 


2 

17 


121 


13 

32 

21 

16 

13 

8 

9 

5 

4 


INMATES AT CLOSE OF THE YEAR. 


All classes. 


To¬ 

tal . 1 


15,439 


1,120 

3,947 

3,042 

2,045 

1,638 

1,250 

1,606 

478 

313 


111 


664 

74 

271 


2,257 

277 

1,413 


774 

472 

820 

550 

426 


369 

361 

528 

103 

113 

247 

324 


298 

134 

74 

192 

367 

203 

267 

103 


461 

483 

306 

( 2 ) 


381 

179 

283 

763 


83 

50 


190 

34 


121 


26 

287 


2,917 


Adults. 


Male. 


2,713 


180 

608 

705 

400 

295 

176 

390 

95 

68 


25 


106 

”49' 


418 

50 

140 


102 

190 

234 

55 

124 


110 

116 

20 

29 

64 

61 


58 

56 


53 

94 

( 2 ) 

34 


103 

73 


92 

58 

33 

207 


10 

14 


46 

6 


19 


68 


Fe¬ 

male, 


5,144 


178 

712 

564 

365 

246 

149 

375 

63 

61 


20 


127 

"31 


389 

93 

230 


108 

186 

169 

18 

83 


88 

117 

24 

24 

53 

59 


52 

34 


53 

77 

( 2 ) 

30 


68 

81 


81 

47 

38 

209 


10 

9 


26 

5 


13 


61 


Children. 


Male. 


4,462 


425 

1,417 

955 

680 

489 

490 
414 
173 
101 


34 


235 

34 

122 


790 

74 

553 


296 

43 

236 

258 

122 


208 

89 

146 

24 

30 

67 

116 


94 

21 

45 

52 
104 
( 2 ) 
120 

53 


148 

169 

173 

( 2 ) 


106 

34 

99 

175 


35 

13 


65 

12 


48 


18 

83 


Fe¬ 

male, 


337 

1,210 

818 

600 

405 

435 

427 

147 

83 


32 


196 

40 

69 


660 

60 

490 


268 

53 

181 

219 

97 


161 

74 

149 

35 

30 

63 

88 


94 

23 

29 

34 

92 

( 2 ) 

83 

50 


142 

160 

133 

( 2 ) 

102 

40 

113 

172 


28 

14 


53 

11 


41 


8 

75 


Blind only. 


To¬ 

tal. 


4,720 


365 

922 

1,036 

565 

698 

446 

429 

142 

117 


323 

"42 


384 

109 

429 


274 

161 

292 

192 

117 


91 

139 

136 

23 

37 

59 

80 


111 

10 

29 

52 

275 

80 

105 

36 


107 

229 

110 


116 


46 

267 


28 

10 


45 

34 


25 


26 

91 


Adults. 


Male. 


1,015 


75 

193 

263 

127 

130 

68 

95 

31 

33 


66 

"9 


124 

23 

46 


11 

28 

122 

46 

56 


48 

25 

5 

17 

17 

15 


14 

4 


15 

76 

21 


29 

39 


38 


57 


15 

6 


33 


Fe¬ 

male, 


1,115 


93 

349 

161 

143 

115 

86 

119 

24 

25 


87 

”6 


143 

72 

134 


13 

37 

70 

12 

29 


36 

69 

10 

4 

11 

13 


24 

6 


13 

63 

9 


28 

58 


28 


91 


25 


Children. 


Male. 


1,390 


102 

200 

336 

156 

237 

163 

107 

54 

35 


88 

ii' 


64 

2 

134 


139 

43 

65 

72 

17 


53 

30 

22 

2 

7 

17 

25 


31 


18 

15 
80 
21 
56 

16 


31 

71 

61 


24 


25 

58 


13 

4 


17 

12 


18 

17 


Fe¬ 

male. 


1,200 


95 

180 

276 

139 

216 

129 

108 

33 

24 


616 

2,278 

990 

315 

497 

269 

454 

220 

143 


82 


13 


53 

12 

115 


111 

53 

35 

62 

15 


38 

25 

20 

6 

9 

14 

27 


42 


11 

9 

56 

29 

49 

20 


19 

61 

49 


26 


21 

61 


5 

11 


8 

16 


Deaf only. 


Able to speak. 


To¬ 

tal . 1 


5,782 


92 


317 

74 

133 


1,238 

100 

940 


249 


295 

207 

239 


17 

80 


34 

63 

121 


86 

124 

10 

15 

44 

70 

108 

40 


167 

102 


( 2 ) 


108 

9 

81 

256 


45 

17 


75 


83 


143 


Adults. Children. 


Male. 


849 


78 

298 

157 

43 

96 

34 

84 

33 

26 


21 


34 

23 


193 

16 

89 


40 


70 

1 

46 


7 

10 


5 

10 

11 


19 

52 


4 

7 

( 2 ) 

14 


25 

9 


17 

1 

8 

58 


15 


11 


26 


Fe¬ 

male 


691 


64 

239 

133 

36 

62 

20 

90 

19 

28 


14 


31 

19' 


150 

12 

77 


43 


51 

1 

38 


4 

14 

13 


10 

28 


5 

6 

( 2 ) 

13 


12 

8 


21 


10 

59 


28 


Male. 


2,166 


252 

940 

377 

99 

142 

99 

132 

84 

41 


28 


142 

34 

48 


495 

39 

406 


86 


li 

89 


3 

15 


11 

16 

54 


25 

21 

7 

4 

10 

( 2 ) 

53 

22 


53 

46 


( 2 ) 


34 

4 

24 

70 


20 

3 


26 

35 


41 


Fe¬ 

male 


2,006 


222 

801 

323 

137 

127 

116 

148 

84 

48 


29 


110 

40 

43 


400 

33 

368 


80 


81 

96 

66 


2 

55 


14 

23 

43 


32 

23 

3 

2 

21 

( 2 ) 

28 

18 


77 

39 


( 2 ) 


36 

4 

39 

69 


19 

6 


27 


32 


48 


1 Includes those whose sex and age were not reported. 


2 Not reported. 
















































































































































































INSTITUTIONS FOR THE BLIND AND DEAF 


55 


FOR BLIND AND DEAF, BY DIVISIONS AND STATES: 1910. 


INMATES AT CLOSE OF THE YEAR—continued. 

INMATES RECEIVED DURING 
THE YEAR. 

RECEIPTS DURING 
THE YEAR. 

, PAYMENTS DURING 
THE YEAR. 

VALUE OF 

PROPERTY AT CLOSE 
OF THE YEAR. 

Deaf only—Continued. 

Both blind and deaf. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
insti¬ 
tu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Number reported. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
insti¬ 
tu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Amount 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
insti¬ 
tu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Amount. 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
insti¬ 
tu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Amount 

reported. 

Unable to speak. 

To¬ 

tal. 

Adults. 

Children. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total, i 

Adults. 

Children. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

4,883 

1,060 

889 

1,603 

1,279 

54 

14 

27 

7 

6 

Ill 

2,648 

1,470 

1,178 

Ill 

$5,650,380 

110 

$5,464,020 

106 

$33,159,771 

135 

26 

19 

70 

20 

4 

1 

2 

1 


13 

195 

105 

90 

13 

537,212 

13 

471,179 

13 

4,778,445 

727 

114 

110 

275 

228 

20 

3 

14 

2 

1 

28 

714 

383 

331 

30 

1,732,970 

29 

1,605,205 

27 

12,286,864 

996 

278 

261 

239 

218 

20 

7 

9 

3 

1 

17 

417 

239 

178 

19 

1,155,182 

19 

1,173,044 

17 

4,449,605 

1,163 

230 

185 

425 

323 

2 


1 


1 

16 

309 

174 

135 

16 

692,711 

16 

669,929 

15 

3,550,028 

441 

90 

78 

131 

90 

2 



1 

1 

12 

421 

228 

193 

10 

390^ 814 

10 

408', 377 

11 

2 ', 431 ; 000 

534 


43 

228 

189 

1 




1 

8 

207 

123 

84 

7 

321,084 

7 

323; 303 

7 

i;608;888 

719 

209 

165 

175 

170 

4 

2 

1 


1 

8 

231 

134 

97 

8 

461 i 821 

8 

420', 071 

8 

1,734,700 

115 

30 

20 

35 

30 

1 

1 




5 

86 

41 

45 

5 

234,349 

5 

270,395 

5 

863,500 

53 

9 

8 

25 

11 






4 

68 

43 

25 

3 

124;237 

3 

122;517 

3 

1,456;741 

19 

4 

6 

6 

3 






1 

20 

8 

12 

1 

23,800 

1 

23,800 

1 

85,000 





















20 

5 

7 

4 

4 

4 

1 

2 

1 


8 

122 

64 

58 

8 

385,560 

8 

315,209 

8 

4,007,112 











1 

13 

6 

7 

1 

31,000 

1 

38,500 

1 

68,500 

96 

17 

6 

60 

13 






3 

40 

27 

13 

3 

96;852 

3 

93,670 

3 

617,833 

626 

99 

91 

229 

207 

9 

2 

5 

2 


14 

425 

240 

185 

17 

1,119,343 

16 

971,296 

16 

7,152,908 

64 

11 

5 

33 

15 

4 


4 



3 

53 

28 

25 

2 

47,716 

2 

48,193 

1 

376,742 

37 

4 

14 

13 

6 

7 

1 

5 


1 

11 

236 

115 

121 

11 

565;911 

11 

585,716 

10 

4,757,214 

245 

49 

50 

70 

76 

6 

2 

2 

1 

1 

3 

70 

43 

27 

5 

264,116 

5 

253,756 

4 

1,202,583 

311 

162 

149 








2 

90 

42 

48 

2 

151,114 

2 

146,698 

2 

707,026 

233 

42 

48 

78 

65 






4 

93 

57 

36 

5 

391,130 

5 

411,169 

4 

1,089,975 

142 

4 

1 

76 

61 

9 

4 

4 

1 


3 

68 

39 

29 

4 

218', 822 

4 

227,281 

4 

1,014;193 

65 

21 

13 

15 

16 

5 

1 

3 

1 


5 

96 

58 

38 

3 

130,000 

3 

134,140 

3 

435,828 

277 



155 

122 

1 




1 

2 

45 

30 

15 

2 

154,144 

2 

154,144 

2 

450,004 

205 

55 

47 

56 

47 






2 

46 

25 

21 

2 

98;145 

2 

105,996 

2 

700,048 

311 

81 

47 

109 

74 

1 


1 



4 

106 

57 

49 

4 

161;102 

4 

155;548 

4 

1,070,791 

80 

15 

14 

22 

29 






2 

19 

9 

10 

2 

48,820 

2 

44,123 

1 

305,000 

42 

7 

16 

12 

7 






2 

18 

8 

10 

2 

49,432 

2 

29,599 

2 

124,185 

125 

37 

28 

34 

26 






2 

29 

16 

13 

2 

86,500 

2 

87,267 

2 

375,000 

123 

35 

33 

37 

18 






2 

46 

29 

17 

2 

94,568 

2 

93;252 

2 

525,000 

101 

25 

18 

38 

20 






4 

43 

23 

20 

2 

41,530 

2 

45,842 

3 

809,500 










1 

27 

15 

12 

2 

9$;642 

2 

99;751 

2 

761,500 

34 



20 

14 

1 




1 

1 

25 

12 

13 

1 

10,000 

1 

28,500 

1 

40,000 

125 

34 

35 

33 

23 






1 

23 

13 

10 

1 

60,750 

1 

60,750 

1 

100,000 

48 

11 

8 

14 

15 






1 

64 

27 

37 

1 

86i 392 

1 

86,392 

1 

300,000 


(21 


(2} 

m 

1 



1 


1 

29 

13 

16 




54 

v ) 

20 

17 

11 

6 






2 

201 

120 

81 

2 

73,500 

2 

67,142 

2 

295,000 

27 

15 

12 






1 

9 

5 

4 

1 

20,000 

1 

20,000 

1 

125,000 

186 

49 

28 

64 


1 




1 

2 

61 

37 

24 

2 

115,814 

2 

119,741 

2 

579,000 

152 

25 

15 

52 

60 






3 

78 

42 

36 

3 

96,366 

3 

94;658 

3 

529;888 

1Q6 

112 

84 






3 

68 

44 

24 

1 

71,284 

1 

71,284 

1 

250,000 




(2) 

( 2 ) 







( 2 ) 

(f) 

( 2 ) 

1 

37,620 

1 

37,620 

1 

250,000 

155 

35 

32 

48 

40 

2 

2 




2 

53 

30 

23 

2 

»163,146 

2 

3129,146 

2 

450,000 

170 

57 

47 

30 

36 






1 

20 

10 

10 

1 

25', 750 

1 

25;500 

1 

500,000 

156 

25 

28 

50 

53 






2 

41 

25 

16 

2 

8o;ooo 

2 

70 ; 000 

2 

7,700 

9 

92 

58 

47 

41 

2 


1 


1 

3 

117 

69 

48 

3 

192,925 

3 

195;425 

3 

777,000 

10 

4 

3 

2 

1 






1 

9 

5 

4 

1 

47,800 

1 

62,800 

1 

219,500 

23 

7 

5 

6 

5 






1 

V 

3 

4 

1 

25;000 

1 

55,000 

1 

t 

45,000 

69 

15 

11 

22 

21 

1 

1 




1 

30 

13 

17 

1 

98,790 

1 

91,565 

1 

375,000 






1 

18 

10 

8 

1 

12; 759 

1 

11,030 

1 

24,000 

13 

4 

1 

5 

3 






1 

22 

10 

12 

1 

50,000 

1 

50,000 

1 

200,000 































1 

6 

3 

3 

1 

10,290 

1 

15,257 

1 

50,000 

33 

9 

8 

25 

11 






3 

62 

40 

22 

2 

113,947 

2 

107,260 

2 

1,406,741 


l 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

3 

9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 

21 

22 

23 

24 

25 

26 

27 

28 

29 

30 

31 

32 

33 

34 

35 

36 

37 

38 

39 

40 

41 

42 

43 

44 

45 

46 

47 

48 

49 

50 

51 

52 

53 

54 

55 

56 

57 

58 

59 


s Returns for one of the institutions reporting cover two years. 


































































































































































56 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 


The following tables show, by geographic divisions, 


among the different classes of inmates at the close of 


the number and percentage of adults and children 


the year: 


Table 46 


INMATES OF INSTITUTIONS FOR BUND AND DEAF AT CLOSE OF THE TEAR: 1910. 


DIVISION. 

All inmates. 1 

Blind only. 




Deaf only. 





Both blind and deaf. 

Aggregate. 

Able to speak. 

Unable to speak. 

Total. 

Adults. 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

Total. 

Adults. 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

Total. 

Adults. 

Chil- 

dren. 

Total. 

Adults. 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

Total. 

Adults. 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

Total. 

Adults 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

United States... 

15,236 

5,630 

9,606 

4,720 

2,130 

2,590 

10,543 

3,489 

7,054 

5,712 

1,540 

4,172 

4,831 

1,949 

2,882 

54 

41 

13 

New England. 

1,120 

358 

762 

365 

168 

197 

751 

187 

564 

616 

142 

474 

135 

45 

90 

4 

3 

1 

Middle Atlantic. 

3,917 

1,320 

2,627 

922 

542 

380 

3,005 

761 

2,244 

2,278 

537 

1,741 

727 

224 

503 

20 

17 

3 

East North Central.... 

3,042 

1,269 

1,773 

1,036 

424 

612 

1,986 

829 

1,157 

990 

290 

700 

996 

539 

457 

20 

16 

4 

West North Central... 

2,045 

765 

1,280 

565 

270 

295 

1,478 

494 

984 

315 

79 

236 

1,163 

415 

748 

2 

1 

1 

South Atlantic. 

1,435 

541 

894 

69S 

245 

453 

S16 

326 

490 

427 

158 

269 

389 

168 

221 

2 


2 

East South Central.... 

1,250 

325 

925 

446 

154 

292 

803 

171 

632 

269 

54 

215 

534 

117 

417 

1 


1 

West South Central.... 

1,606 

765 

841 

429 

214 

215 

1,173 

548 

625 

454 

174 

280 

719 

374 

345 

4 

3 

1 

Mountain. 

478 

158 

320 

142 

55 

87 

335 

102 

233 

220 

52 

168 

115 

50 

65 

1 

1 


Pacific. 

313 

129 

184 

117 

58 

59 

196 

71 

125 

143 

54 

89 

53 

17 

36 





i Exclusive of one institution in South Atlantic division not reporting age distribution of deaf inmates. 


Table 4 7 


INMATES OF INSTITUTIONS FOR BLIND AND DEAF 
AT CLOSE OF THE YEAR: 1910. 1 


DIVISION. 

All 

inmates. 

Blind 

only. 

Deaf only. 

Per cent adults. 

Per cent children. 

Per cent adults. 

Per cent children. 

Total. 

Able to 
speak. 

Unable to 
speak. 

Per cent 
adults. 

Per cent 
children. 

Per cent 
adults. 

Per cent 
children. 

Per cent 
adults. 

Per cent 
children. 

United States. 

37.0 

63.0 

45.1 

54.9 

33.1 

66.9, 

27.0 

73.0 

40.3 

59.7 

New England. 

32.0 

68.0 

46.0 

54.0 

24.9 

75.1 

23.1 

76.9 

33.3 

66.7 

Middle Atlantic. 

33.4 

66.6 

58.8 

41.2 

25.3 

74.7 

23.6 

76.4 

30.8 

69.2 

East North Central. 

41.7 

58.3 

40.9 

59.1 

41.7 

58.3 

29.3 

70.7 

54.1 

45.9 

West North Central. 

37.4 

62.6 

47.8 

52.2 

33.4 

66.6 

25.1 

74.9 

35.7 

64.3 

South Atlantic. 

37.7 

62.3 

35.1 

64.9 

40.0 

60.0 

37.0 

63.0 

43.2 

56.8 

East South Central. 

26.0 

74.0 

34.5 

65.5 

21.3 

78.7 

20.1 

79.9 

21.9 

78.1 

West South Central. 

47.6 

52.4 

49.9 

50.1 

46.7 

53.3 

38.3 

61.7 

52.0 

48.0 

Mountain. 

33.1 

66.9 

38.7 

61.3 

30.4 

69.6 

23.6 

76.4 

43.5 

56.5 

Pacific. 

41.2 

58.8 

49.6 

50.4 

36.2 

63.8 

37.8 

62.2 

32.1 

67.9 


1 Percentage not shown for persons both blind and deaf, as base is less than 100. 

From these tables the following general facts ap¬ 
pear: (1) The number of deaf persons under care and 
training is more than double the number of those who 


are blind only; (2) the number of those who are both 
blind and deaf is so small as to be practically negli¬ 
gible for purposes of percentages or comparison; (3) 
the deaf persons able to speak outnumber those 
unable to speak; (4) the children outnumber the adults, 
forming 63 per cent of the entire number under care, 
54.9 per cent of those who were blind only, and 66.9 
per cent of those who were deaf only, but including 
only 13 of the 54 who were both blind and deaf; and 
(5) of the two classes of deaf persons the children 
number 73 per cent of those able to speak, and 59.7 
per cent of those unable to speak; of the adults, how¬ 
ever, 27 per cent only were able to speak and 40.3 per 
cent were unable to speak. 

The geographic distribution depends to a consid¬ 
erable degree upon the emphasis laid on different 
forms of training by the different states. Some states, 
as Indiana, give special attention to the industrial 
training of adults, both blind and deaf, and in those 
states the percentage of adults is naturally greater. 


Table 48 


INMATES OF INSTITUTIONS FOR BLIND AND DEAF AT CLOSE OF THE YEAR: 1910. 


DIVISION. 

All 

inmates. 1 

Blind only. 

Deaf only. 1 

Both blind and deaf. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Aggregate. 

Able to speak. 

Unable to speak. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

United States. 

15,236 

8.061 

7,175 

4,720 

2.405 

2,315 

10.543 

5,678 

4,865 

5.712 

3,015 

2,697 

4,831 

2,663 

2,168 

54 

21 

33 

New England. 

1,120 

605 

515 

365 

177 

188 

751 

426 

325 

616 

330 

286 

135 

96 

39 

4 

2 

2 

Middle Atlantic. 

3,947 

2.025 

1,922 

922 

393 

529 

3,005 

1,627 

1,378 

2,278 

1,238 

1.040 

727 

389 

338 

20 

5 

15 

East North Central. 

3,042 

1,660 

1,382 

1,036 

599 

437 

1.986 

1,051 

935 

990 

534 

456 

996 

517 

479 

20 

10 

10 

West North Central. 

2,045 

1,080 

965 

565 

283 

282 

1.478 

797 

681 

315 

142 

173 

1,163 

655 

508 

2 


2 

South Atlantic. 

1,435 

784 

651 

698 

367 

331 

816 

459 

357 

427 

238 

189 

'389 

221 

168 

2 

1 

i 

East South Central. 

1,250 

666 

584 

446 

231 

215 

803 

435 

368 

269 

133 

136 

534 

302 

232 

1 


l 

West South Central. 

1,606 

804 

802 

429 

202 

227 

1.173 

600 

573 

454 

216 

238 

719 

384 

335 

4 

9 

2 

Mountain. 

478 

268 

210 

142 

85 

57 

335 

182 

153 

220 

117 

103 

115 

65 

50 

1 

i 


Pacific. 

313 

169 

144 

117 

68 

49 

196 

101 

95 

143 

67 

76 

53 

34 

19 

. 


1 Exclusive of the figures for one institution in South Atlantic division not reporting sex distribution of deaf inmates. 










































































































































































































































SPECIAL SUMMARIES. 


57 


Table 49 


INMATES OF INSTITUTIONS FOR BLIND AND DEAF AT 
CLOSE OF year: 1910. 1 


DIVISION. 

All 

inmates. 

Blind 

only. 

Deaf only. 

Per cent male. 

Per cent female. 

Per cent male. 

Per cent female. 

Total. 

Able to 
speak. 

Unable 
to speak. 

Percent 

male. 

Percent 

female. 

Per cent 

male. 

Per cent 

female. 

Per cent 

male. 

Per cent 

female. 

United States. 

52.9 

47.1 

51.0 

49.0 

53.9 

46.1 

52.8 

47.2 

55.1 

44.9 

New England.... 

54.0 

46.0 

48.5 

51.5 

56.7 

43.3 

53.6 

46.4 

71.1 

28.9 

Middle Atlantic. 

51.3 

48.7 

42.6 

57.4 

54.1 

45.9 

54.3 

45.7 

53.5 

46.5 

East North Central. 

54.6 

45.4 

57.8 

42.2 

52.9 

47.1 

53.9 

46.1 

51.9 

48.1 

West North Central. 

52.8 

47.2 

50.1 

49.9 

53.9 

46.1 

45.1 

54.9 

56.3 

43.7 

South Atlantic. 

54.6 

45.4 

52.6 

47.4 

56.3 

43.7 

55.7 

44.3 

56.8 

43.2 

East South Central. 

53.3 

46.7 

51.8 

48.2 

54.2 

45.8 

49.4 

50.6 

56.6 

43.4 

West South Central. 

50.1 

49.9 

47.1 

52.9 

51.2 

48.8 

47.6 

52.4 

53.4 

46.6 

Mountain. 

56.1 

43.9 

59.9 

40.1 

54.3 

45.7 

53.2 

46.8 

56.5 

43.5 

Pacific. 

54.0 

46.0 

58.1 

41.9 

51.5 

48.5 

46.9 

53.1 

64.2 

35.8 


1 Percentages not shown for persons both blind and deaf as base is less than 100. 


In general, admission to these institutions is limited, 
except under special conditions, to those under 21 
years of age, which accounts to a considerable degree 
for the preponderance of children. The distribution 
by sex of the inmates of institutions for the blind 
and deaf is given in Tables 48 and 49. 

The tables show a notable uniformity. Of the total 
number of inmates 52.9 per cent were males and 47.1 
per cent females; of the blind only, 51 per cent were 
males and 49 per cent females; for the deaf only, the 
corresponding percentages were 53.9 and 46.1, respec¬ 
tively. Of those who were both blind and deaf, how¬ 
ever, 33 were females and 21 males; but, as already 
stated, the numbers involved are too small to furnish 
the basis for any satisfactory conclusions. The geo¬ 
graphic distribution follows, with no important excep¬ 
tion, the general proportions indicated above. 


SPECIAL SUMMARIES. 


Under this heading are presented summaries of cer¬ 
tain special phases of the statistics of benevolent 
institutions, together with descriptive text and ana¬ 
lytical tables. Persons under the care of institutions 
and adults and children in institutions at the close of 
the year, and persons received into institutions during 
the year are presented by classes of institutions and 
sex in Tables 50 to 56; Tables 57 to 59 show the 
statistics of the placement of children in homes and 
institutions; Tables 60 to 63 give the number of in¬ 
stitutions of the different classes and the inmates 

SEX AND AGE 

The value of a classification by sex of the persons 
cared for or relieved by benevolent institutions varies 
considerably according to the character of the different 
classes of institutions. There is, for example, little, if 
any, value in such classification for the inmates of 
hospitals. Except for the purposes of medical inves¬ 
tigation in regard to certain types of disease, whether 
a general hospital receives more men or women is a 
fact of little significance, and such medical investiga¬ 
tion belongs to a different department of census work. 
It is of interest, however, to know whether the majority 
of adults who receive the benefit of general relief are 
men or women, and whether more boys or girls appear 
in the records of the dependent classes. So, also, it 
is of interest to know whether sex is an important 
factor in the constitution of the transient element in 
the population of these institutions. 

The conditions as to sex have been set forth and 
discussed in connection with the summaries of the 
statistics for the different classes of institutions. In 
Tables 50-53 they are summarized for all classes of 


of these institutions grouped according to the char¬ 
acter of the supervisory agency; Tables 64 to 72 pre¬ 
sent the income of institutions during the year under 
the head of public appropriations, donations, and 
receipts from care of inmates; the expenditures dur¬ 
ing the year for running expenses; the value of land, 
buildings, etc., and of invested funds at the close 
of the year; and Tables 73 to 77 give the number of 
different classes of institutions with the number of 
inmates under federal, state, county, and municipal 
care. 

OF INMATES. 

institutions. Table 50 gives statistics for all persons 
under the care of benevolent institutions at the close 
of the year, Table 51 for persons received into insti¬ 
tutions during the year, and Tables 52 and 53 for 
children and adults in the institutions at the close of 
the year. 

It should be noted that Table 50 includes both 
resident inmates of institutions, and those outside of 
institutions but under their care or supervision, while 
Tables 52 and 53 are confined to those adults and chil¬ 
dren actually resident in institutions, and Table 51 
includes all persons, adults and children, received 
into institutions, except patients treated in dispen¬ 
saries and children received by societies under their 
general care, aside from those received into receiving 
homes. The sex records for the two classes excluded 
are in the main incomplete and unsatisfactory; the 
children received into the receiving homes of societies 
for the protection and care of children are, however, 
already accounted for under the head of institutions 
for the care of children. 






























































1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 

9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 

21 

22 

23 

24 

25 

26 

27 

28 

29 

30 

31 

32 

33 

34 

35 

36 

37 

38 

39 

40 

41 

42 

43 

44 

45 

46 

47 

48 

49 

50 

51 

52 

53 

54 

55 

56 

57 

58 

59 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

PERSONS UNDER CARE OF BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS AT CLOSE OF THE YEAR, 


ALL INSTITUTIONS. 


Persons under care at close of the year. 


Total 

number 

reported. 

Number 
reporting 
persons 
under 
care at 
close of 
the year. 


Total 
number 
reported, i 

With sex reported. 

Number 
of in¬ 
stitutions 
reporting. 

Nu 

Total. 

mber of perse 

Male. 

ms. 

Female. 

5,408 

4,420 

408,830 

4,161 

379,878 

212,594 

167,284 

654 

565 

38,463 

548 

36,585 

19,181 

17,404 

1,693 

1,272 

143,528 

1,221 

135,240 

73,081 

62,159 

1,055 

912 

90,138 

849 

83,160 

49,504 

33,656 

547 

469 

41,715 

426 

37,175 

21,344 

15,831 

578 

465 

33,964 

432 

31,176 

16,976 

14,200 

203 

165 

13,191 

152 

12,467 

6,625 

5,842 

210 

177 

13,463 

158 

11,64S 

6,250 

5,398 

176 

147 

9,152 

136 

8,239 

4,976 

3,263 

292 

248 

25,216 

239 

24,188 

14,657 

9,531 

56 

47 

3,744 

46 

3,672 

2,705 

967 

62 

58 

2,573 

55 

2,130 

938 

1,192 

24 

20 

830 

19 

790 

433 

357 

360 

308 

20,989 

300 

19,913 

9,740 

10,173 

56 

45 

3,666 

43 

3,471 

1,753 

1,718 

96 

87 

6,661 

85 

6,609 

3,612 

2,997 

800 

632 

85,489 

620 

84,227 

46,253 

37,974 

207 

171 

16,036 

158 

14,908 

8,114 

6,794 

686 

469 

42,003 

443 

36,105 

18,714 

17,391 

310 

271 

29,687 

255 

28,063 

16,793 

11,270 

177 

147 

11,505 

143 

11,217 

6,669 

4,548 

325 

278 

26,838 

252 

24,292 

14,358 

9,934 

136 

118 

11,199 

111 

10,526 

5,953 

4,573 

107 

98 

10,909 

88 

9,062 

5,731 

3,331 

128 

112 

8,639 

104 

7,691 

4,355 

3,336 

103 

92 

8,209 

75 

7,022 

3,828 

3,194 

159 

128 

12,018 

119 

10,736 

5,692 

5,044 

18 

14 

1,159 

14 

1,159 

526 

633 

17 

13 

1,420 

13 

1,420 

959 

461 

50 

46 

3,212 

42 

3,036 

1,584 

1,452 

72 

64 

7,058 

59 

6,111 

4,400 

1,711 

23 

19 

769 

18 

693 

398 

295 

137 

104 

8,062 

93 

7,285 

3,218 

4,067 

72 

55 

6,481 

54 

6,200 

3,984 

2,216 

98 

81 

6,359 

78 

6,264 

4,200 

2,064 

34 

29 

2,757 

27 

2,097 

1,056 

1,041 

63 

54 

3,466 

49 

3,313 

1,629 

1,684 

38 

30 

2,203 

28 

1,966 

948 

1,018 

81 

64 

3,113 

60 

2,819 

1,288 

1,531 

32 

29 

754 

25 

539 

255 

284 

89 

71 

5,840 

67 

5,669 

2,478 

3,191 

57 

47 

4,363 

44 

4,127 

2,725 

1,402 

36 

30 

1,763 

28 

1,636 

876 

760 

21 

17 

1,225 

13 

1,035 

546 

489 

36 

28 

1,375 

27 

1,350 

707 

643 

61 

56 

5,937 

50 

4,889 

2,617 

2,272 

19 

17 

803 

14 

701 

339 

362 

94 

76 

5,348 

67 

4,708 

2,587 

2,121 

26 

22 

957 

21 

877 

499 

378 

11 

10 

727 

10 

727 

431 

296 

8 

7 

221 

7 

221 

190 

31 

72 

63 

5,049 

58 

4,430 

2,544 

1,886 

27 

23 

1,152 

21 

1,078 

738 

340 

17 

9 

215 

8 

185 

102 

83 

14 

12 

740 

10 

630 

428 

202 

1 

1 

91 

1 

91 

44 

47 

71 

63 

5,269 

62 

5,202 

3,110 

2,092 

32 

30 

3,604 

30 

3,604 

1,868 

1,736 

189 

155 

16,343 

147 

15,382 

9,679 

5,703 


INSTITUTIONS FOR 

CARE OF CHILDREN. 

Number 
of insti¬ 
tutions 
report¬ 
ing. 

Children under care at close of the 
year. 

Total. 1 

With sex reported. 

Male. 

i 

Female. 

1,077 

147.997 

77,112 

63,219 

110 

14,023 

7,196 

6,123 

291 

51,315 

29,063 

21,637 

248 

33,082 

17,145 

12,332 

93 

15,912 

8,166 

6,965 

139 

12, 692 

5,330 

6,182 

50 

4,512 

1,973 

2,418 

53 

4,741 

2,514 

2,030 

24 

2,815 

1,214 

1,390 

69 

8,905 

4,511 

4,142 

11 

883 

450 

433 

17 

1,742 

573 

746 

2 

116 

96 

20 

48 

7,290 

3,857 

3,184 

11 

1,284 

631 

633 

21 

2,708 

1,589 

1,107 

144 

33,571 

19,129 

14,289 

45 

4,943 

2,506 

2,231 

102 

12,801 

7,428 

5,117 

100 

12,206 

6,174 

4,937 

44 

4,236 

2,286 

1,733 

63 

8,238 

4,640 

2,737 

23 

4,199 

2,345 

1,679 

18 

4,203 

1,700 

1,246 

16 

3,130 

1,806 

1,324 

18 

4,151 

2,039 

1,806 

31 

5,030 

2,405 

2,155 

2 

461 

249 

212 

2 

628 

290 

338 

9 

1,126 

614 

512 

15 

1,386 

763 

618 

5 

391 

234 

87 

33 

2,917 

1,176 

1,555 

14 

1,190 

618 

572 

27 

1,521 

578 

929 

8 

1,289 

314 

328 

16 

2,120 

988 

1,132 

10 

1,529 

797 

732 

20 

1,536 

593 

737 

6 

199 

32 

110 

21 

2,291 

1,045 

1,246 

14 

933 

375 

467 

8 

655 

320 

335 

7 

633 

233 

370 

7 

243 

96 

122 

24 

3,107 

1,823 

1,251 

4 

95 

50 

45 

18 

1,296 

545 

612 

2 

224 

99 

125 

2 

295 

106 

189 

1 

13 

9 

4 

12 

1,740 

844 

741 

2 

148 


148 

1 

41 


41 

3 

263 

112 

95 

1 

91 

44 

47 

10 

1,302 

769 

533 

6 

1,265 

494 

771 

53 

6,338 

3,248 

2,838 


1 Includes those whose sex was not reported. 







































































































SEX AND AGE OF INMATES 

BY CLASS OF INSTITUTION AND SEX, FOR DIVISIONS AND STATES: 1910. 


59 


SOCIETIES FOR PROTECTION 

AND 

HOMES 

FOR ADULTS. OR ADULTS AND 











CARE OF CHILDREN. 

CHILDREN. 


HOSPITALS AND 

SANITARIUMS. 

INSTITUTIONS FOR 

BLIND AND DEAF. 



Children under care at close 
of the year. 


Inmates at close of the year. 


Inmates at close of the year. 


Inmates at close of the year. 


Number 
of soci¬ 
eties re¬ 
porting. 


With sex reported. 

Number 
of insti- 


With sex reported. 

Number 
of insti- 


With sex reported. 

Number 
of insti- 


With sex reported. 





tut ions 




tutions 




tutions 





Total. 1 

Male. 

Female. 

report¬ 

ing. 

Total. 1 

Male. 

Female. 

report¬ 

ing. 

Total. 1 

Male. 

Female. 

report¬ 

ing. 

Total. 1 

Male. 

Female. 



148 

32,776 

15,038 

12,086 

1,358 

116,228 

65,242 

48,210 

1,716 

96,390 

47,141 

36,594 

121 

15,439 

8,061 

7,175 

1 

14 

2,320 

1,081 

% 

1,239 

219 

10,357 

5,345 

4,711 

209 

10,643 

4,954 

4,816 

13 

1,120 

605 

515 

2 

51 

16,115 

6,759 

4,741 

429 

35,362 

16,238 

18,532 

469 

36,789 

18,996 

15,327 

32 

3,947 

2,025 

1,922 

3 

42 

5,679 

3,013 

2,611 

254 

30,538 

19,600 

9,968 

347 

17,797 

8,086 

7,363 

21 

3,042 

1,660 

1,382 

4 

16 

1,758 

420 

512 

121 

12,092 

7,507 

4,299 

223 

9,908 

4,171 

3,090 

16 

2,045 

1,080 

965 

5 

9 

3,770 

2,151 

1,510 

139 

9,553 

5,663 

3,672 

165 

6,311 

3,048 

2,185 

13 

1,638 

784 

651 

6 

3 

162 

121 

41 

53 

5,061 

2,994 

2,050 

51 

2,206 

871 

749 

8 

1,250 

666 

584 

7 

5 

70 

15 

8 

51 

3,781 

1,595 

2,079 

59 

3,265 

1,322 

479 

9 

1,606 

804 

802 

8 

3 

233 

132 

101 

17 

1,514 

869 

596 

98 

4,112 

2,493 

966 

5 

478 

268 

210 

9 

5 

2,669 

1,346 

1,323 

75 

7,970 

5,431 

2,303 

95 

5,359 

3,200 

1,619 

4 

313 

169 

144 

10 

1 

219 

131 

88 

16 

1,947 

1,795 

152 

18 

584 

270 

242 

1 

111 

59 

52 

11 

2 

41 

16 

25 

16 

371 

144 

213 

23 

419 

205 

208 





12 


8 

432 

234 

198 

10 

282 

103 

139 





13 

9 

1,195 

542 

653 

127 

5,070 

1,928 

2,875 

116 

6,770 

3,072 

3,138 

8 

664 

341 

323 

14 

1 

611 

274 

337 

17 

788 

353 

415 

15 

909 

461 

293 

1 

74 

34 

40 

15 

1 

254 

118 

136 

35 

1,749 

891 

858 

27 

1,679 

843 

796 

3 

271 

171 

100 

16 

17 

4,971 

2,958 

1,963 

212 

21,692 

10,569 

10,907 

241 

22,998 

12,389 

9,766 

18 

2,257 

1,208 

1,049 

17 

11 

3; 629 

2,089 

1,418 

58 

3,806 

1,855 

1,702 

54 

3,381 

1,540 

1.290 

3 

277 

124 

153 

18 

23 

7,515 

1,712 

1,360 

159 

9,864 

3,814 

5,923 

174 

10,410 

5,067 

4,271 

11 

1,413 

693 

720 

19 

12 

488 

238 

195 

80 

9,669 

6,495 

2,856 

74 

6,550 

3,488 

2,906 

5 

774 

398 

376 

20 

17 

1,260 

661 

599 

37 

4,097 

2,753 

5,811 

1,344 

47 

1,440 

736 

633 

2 

472 

233 

239 

21 

5 

1,918 

1,013 

905 

83 

9,916 

3,469 

122 

5,946 

2,424 

2,473 

5 

820 

470 

350 

22 

3 

1,611 

884 

727 

30 

2,725 

1,593 

1,116 

58 

2,114 

818 

814 

4 

550 

313 

237 

23 

5 

402 

217 

185 

24 

4,131 

2,948 

1,183 

46 

1,747 

620 

* 537 

5 

426 

246 

180 

24 

4 

159 

92 

67 

28 

2,142 

1,167 

852 

62 

2,839 

1,082 

932 

2 

369 

208 

161 

25 

2 

52 

35 

17 

26 

1,761 

982 

767 

44 

1,884 

573 

442 

2 

361 

199 

162 

26 

4 

258 

128 

130 

36- 

2,978 

1,258 

1,569 

53 

3,224 

1,639 

924 

4 

‘ 528 

262 

266 

27 

1 

360 

117 

243 

2 

148 

64 

84 

7 

87 

52 

35 

2 

103 

44 

59 

28 

1 

19 

3 

10 

9 

2 

548 

548 


6 

112 

52 

60 

2 

113 

59 

54 

29 

1 

3 

13 

945 

467 

478 

21 

891 

372 

343 

2 

247 

131 

116 

30 

3 

907 

38 

43 

14 

3,570 

3,021 

549 

30 

871 

401 

354 

2 

324 

177 

147 

31 





9 

241 

85 

150 

5 

137 

79 

58 





32 

2 

809 

498 

311 

28 

1,831 

544 

1,272 

37 

2,207 

848 

783 

4 

298 

152 

146 

33 

1 

1,652 

1,061 

591 

53 

2,528 

1,750 

658 

15 

977 

478 

338 

2 

134 

77 

57 

34 

2 

'565 

'261 

304 

25 

3,181 

2,669 

506 

26 

1,018 

647 

296 

1 

74 

45 

29 

35 

1 

557 

286 

271 

4 

246 

56 

190 

15 

473 

295 

165 

1 

192 

105 

87 

36 

1 

3 

1 

2 

10 

426 

236 

180 

26 

550 

206 

201 

1 

367 

198 

169 

37 

1 

75 

44 

31 

13 

22 

255 

708 

21 

278 

223 

419 

5 

141 

86 

32 

1 

203 



38 

20 

602 

263 

262 

2 

267 

154 

113 

39 

1 

109 



5 

137 

24 

74 

16 

206 

146 

50 

1 

103 

53 

50 

40 




26 

2,165 

788 

1,360 

22 

923 

394 

375 

2 

461 

251 

210 

41 

1 

121 

87 

34 

16 

2,326 

1,869 

457 

13 

500 

152 

203 

3 

483 

242 

241 

42 

2 

41 

34 

7 

10 

390 

192 

198 

7 

371 

157 

87 

3 

306 

173 

133 

43 



1 

180 

145 

35 

9 

412 

168 

84 





44 

1 

9 

5 

4 

7 

371 

127 

244 

11 

371 

281 

90 

2 

381 

198 

183 

45 





18 

1,279 

430 

766 

12 

1,372 

272 

168 

2 

179 

92 

87 

46 

2 

26 

9 

2 

4 

305 

133 

162 

5 

94 

15 

2 

2 

283 

132 

151 

47 

2 

35 

1 

2 

22 

1,826 

905 

907 

31 

1,428 

754 

219 

3 

763 

382 

381 

48 

1 

3 

1 

2 

4 

207 

96 

111 

14 

440 

258 

102 

1 

83 

45 

38 

49 

1 

52 

31 

21 

1 

177 

177 


5 

153 

90 

63 

1 

50 

27 

23 

50 

1 

53 

44 

9 

5 

155 

137 

18 





51 





9 

948 

429 

470 

41 

2,171 

1,160 

596 

i 

190 

111 

79 

52 

1 

178 

100 

78 





19 

792 

620 

98 

1 

34 

18 

16 

53 





8 

174 

102 

42 





54 





2 

129 

123 

6 

6 

227 

126 

47 

1 

121 

67 

54 

55 

















56 


1,152 

636 


537 

354 

19 

10 

1,445 

704 

873 

481 

556 

223 

33 

12 

1,370 

973 

853 

593 

466 





51 

1 

1 

010 

282 

380 

i 

26 

18 

8 

58 

3 

881 

449 

432 

46 

5,821 

4,077 

1,524 

50 

3,016 

1,754 

773 

3 

287 

151 

136 

59 



















































































1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 

9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

16 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 

21 

22 

23 

24 

25 

26 

27 

28 

29 

30 

31 

32 

33 

34 

35 

30 

37 

38 

39 

40 

41 

42 

43 

44 

45 

46 

47 

48 

49 

50 

51 

52 

53 

54 

55 

56 

57 

58 

59 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

PERSONS RECEIVED INTO BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS DURING THE YEAR, 


ALL INSTITUTIONS. 

INSTITUTIONS FOR CARE OF CHILDREN. 

Number 
reporting 
persons 
received 
during 
the year. 

Persons received during the year. 

Number 
of insti¬ 
tutions 
reporting. 

Children received during the year. 

Total 
number 
reported, i 

With sex reported. 

Total . 1 

With sex reported. 

Number 
of insti¬ 
tutions 
reporting. 

Nl 

Total. 

imber of perso 

Male. 

OS. 

Female. 

Male. 

Female. 

4,307 

2,960,538 

4,116 

2,678,939 

1,791,131 

887,808 

1,065 

85,829 

50,874 

30,487 

549 

314,742 

521 

293,944 

186,563 

107,381 

112 

8,066 

3,553 

2,670 

1,226 

1,239,399 

1,189 

1,155,991 

819,813 

336,178 

'287 

35,873 

24,679 

10,940 

875 

622,246 

843 

521,614 

311,560 

210,054 

246 

18,712 

11,317 

7,238 

461 

212,615 

421 

189,190 

113,458 

75, 732 

90 

7,581 

2,856 

2,907 

465 

185,081 

443 

162,693 

104,599 

58,094 

138 

3,883 

1,977 

1,704 

163 

56, 477 

153 

49,159 

27,613 

21,546 

47 

1,456 

676 

743 

166 

79,297 

155 

67,273 

49,548 

17,725 

49 

2,360 

1,345 

938 

151 

67, 791 

146 

62,977 

40,455 

22,522 

27 

2,589 

1,391 

1,198 

251 

182,890 

245 

176,098 

137,522 

38,576 

69 

5,309 

3,080 

2,149 

47 

14,392 

43 

14,318 

7,744 

6,574 

12 

20S 

92 

112 

56 

8,255 

52 

7, 791 

4,051 

3,740 

17 

625 

318 

258 

21 

5,73*7 

20 

5,369 

3,030 

2,339 

2 

58 

48 

10 

299 

215,383 

284 

197,194 

123,722 

73,472 

48 

5,632 

2,341 

1,687 

43 

19,363 

42 

19,288 

10,875 

8,413 

11 

724 

346 

378 

83 

51,612 

80 

49,984 

37,141 

12,843 

22 

819 

408 

225 

620 

771,175 

600 

728,768 

512,991 

215,777 

143 

26,465 

19,476 

6,989 

162 

128,836 

158 

125,472 

94,497 

30,975 

43 

5,131 

2,783 

2,337 

444 

339,388 

431 

301,751 

212,325 

89,426 

101 

4,277 

2,420 

1,614 

260 

245,111 

253 

241,714 

150,314 

91,400 

102 

6,995 

4,118 

2,759 

134 

37,777 

129 

36,143 

22,153 

13,990 

45 

1,277 

689 

549 

269 

158,511 

259 

145,909 

79,419 

66,490 

58 

7,348 

4,739 

2,609 

118 

122,393 

112 

42,654 

21,697 

20,957 

24 

1,951 

1,137 

814 

94 

58,454 

90 

55,194 

37,977 

17,217 

17 

1,141 

634 

507 

112 

60,747 

105 

54,289 

29,104 

25,185 

16 

1,194 

503 

615 

92 

29,329 

77 

22,777 

11,649 

11,128 

17 

1,182 

492 

406 

121 

77,706 

111 

72,378 

47,986 

24,372 

29 

3,677 

1,050 

1,215 

14 

3,792 

13 

2,382 

1,157 

1,225 

1 

65 

38 

27 

14 

4,808 

13 

3,621 

2,009 

1,612 

2 

106 

48 

58 

45 

15,514 

43 

14,914 

8,413 

6,501 

9 

642 

361 

235 

63 

20,719 

59 

18,849 

13,140 

5,709 

16 

715 

364 

351 

17 

2,195 

17 

2,195 

1,330 

865 

5 

92 

62 

30 

112 

47,569 

104 

36,332 

20,041 

16,291 

35 

1,310 

695 

596 

53 

58,350 

52 

54,429 

38,399 

16,030 

14 

503 

285 

218 

77 

24,818 

74 

21,198 

15,507 

5,691 

27 

309 

137 

172 

29 

10,023 

28 

9,840 

5,948 

3,892 

8 

349 

90 

76 

53 

11,006 

52 

10,333 

5,389 

4,944 

14 

388 

210 

178 

31 

5,000 

29 

4,068 

2,205 

1,863 

10 

232 

129 

103 

68 

19,758 

63 

18,086 

10,657 

7,429 

21 

604 

331 

273 

25 

6,362 

24 

6,212 

5,123 

1,089 

4 

96 

38 

58 

74 

20,813 

71 

19,608 

11,817 

7,791 

20 

526 

272 

254 

46 

15,614 

42 

10,618 

5,719 

4,899 

13 

595 

255 

303 

27 

7,494 

25 

6,645 

3,762 

2,883 

8 

198 

87 

111 

16 

12,556 

15 

12,288 

6,315 

5,973 

6 

137 

62 

75 

28 

11,751 

28 

10,505 

8,713 

1,792 

6 

179 

87 

92 

50 

23,595 

49 

22,454 

14,042 

8,412 

21 

1,352 

894 

458 

14 

3,209 

13 

1,512 

1,081 

431 

4 

102 

39 

63 

74 

40,742 

65 

32,802 

25,712 

7,090 

18 

727 

325 

325 

24 

21,058 

24 

21,058 

12,935 

8,123 

3 

207 

114 

93 

10 

2,944 

10 

2,944 

1,699 

1,245 

2 

249 

129 

120 

7 

2,708 

7 

2,708 

2,390 

318 

1 

13 

9 

4 

64 

28,340 

60 

24,226 

15,233 

8,993 

13 

1,724 

965 

759 

20 

3,719 

19 

3,019 

2,446 

573 

2 

74 


74 

11 

2,152 

11 

2,152 

1,720 

432 

2 

83 

29 

54 

14 

6,857 

14 

6,857 

4,023 

2,834 

3 

226 

136 

90 

1 

13 

1 

13 

9 

4 

1 

13 

9 

4 

65 

32,325 

64 

32,245 

20,536 

11,709 

11 

1,069 

579 

410 

28 

55,341 

2S 

55,341 

49,536 

5,805 

5 

414 

175 

239 

158 

95,224 

153 

88,512 

67,450 

21,062 

53 

3,826 

2,326 

1,500 


Total 

number 

reported. 


5,408 


654 

1,693 

1,055 

547 

578 

203 

210 

176 

292 


56 

62 

24 

360 

56 

96 


800 

207 

686 


310 

177 

325 

136 

107 


128 

103 

159 

18 

17 

50 

72 


23 

137 

72 

98 

34 

63 

38 

81 

32 


89 

57 

36 

21 


36 

61 

19 

94 


26 

11 

8 

72 

27 

17 

14 

1 


71 

32 

189 


1 Includes those whose sex was not reported. 

































































































SEX AND AGE OF INMATES 

BY CLASS OF INSTITUTION AND SEX, FOR DIVISIONS AND STATES: 1910. 


61 


HOMES FOR ADULTS, OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN. 

HOSPITALS AND SANITARIUMS. 

INSTITUTIONS FOR 

BLIND AND DEAF. 



Persons received during the year. 


Persons received during the year. 


Persons received during the year. 


Number 


With sex reported. 

Number 


With sex reported. 

Number 


With sex reported. 


of insti- 




of insti- 




of insti- 





tutions 




tutions 




tutions 





reporting. 

Total, i 



reporting. 

Total, i 



reporting. 

Total. 1 






Male. 

Female. 



Male. 

Female. 



Male. 

Female. 


1,302 

918,752 

756,691 

140,302 

1,829 

1,953,309 

982,096 

715,841 

Ill 

2,648 

1,470 

1,178 

1 

198 

82,049 

71,837 

9,630 

226 

224,432 

111,068 

94,991 

13 

195 

105 

90 

2 

420 

514,466 

446,041 

51,655 

491 

688,346 

348, 710 

273,252 

28 

714 

383 

331 

3 

244 

208,430 

144,117 

60,852 

368 

394,687 

155,887 

141,786 

17 

417 

239 

178 

4 

116 

23,834 

15,729 

7,816 

239 

180,891 

94,699 

64,874 

16 

309 

174 

135 

5 

132 

23,125 

18,790 

4,174 

183 

157,652 

83,604 

52,023 

12 

421 

228 

193 

6 

53 

7,035 

5,404 

1,436 

55 

47,779 

21,410 

19,283 

8 

207 

123 

84 

7 

50 

2,565 

766 

1,799 

59 

74,141 

47,303 

14,891 

8 

231 

134 

97 

8 

18 

1,773 

733 

739 

101 

53,343 

38,290 

20,540 

5 

86 

41 

45 

9 

71 

55,475 

53,274 

2,201 

107 

122,0.38 

81,125 

34,201 

4 

68 

4.3 

25 

10 

13 

1,170 

746 

382 

21 

12,994 

6,898 

6,068 

1 

20 

8 

12 

11 

14 

91 

45 

46 

25 

7,539 

3,688 

3,436 





12 

8 

126 

60 

66 

11 

5^553 

2^922 

2 ,263 





13 

118 

55,851 

47,164 

8,147 

125 

153;778 

74; 1.53 

63; 580 

8 

122 

64 

58 

14 

15 

902 

491 

411 

16 

17,724 

10,032 

7,617 

1 

13 

6 

7 

15 

30 

23,909 

23,331 

578 

28 

26,844 

13,375 

12,027 

3 

40 

27 

13 

16 

213 

347,207 

286,478 

44,100 

2.50 

397,078 

206,797 

164,503 

14 

425 

240 

185 

17 

56 

55,121 

53,963 

1,017 

60 

68, .531 

37,723 

27,596 

3 

53 

28 

25 

18 

151 

112,138 

105,600 

6,538 

181 

222,737 

104,190 

81,153 

11 

236 

115 

121 

19 

77 

1,50,696 

100,085 

50,611 

78 

87,350 

46,068 

38,003 

3 

70 

43 

27 

20 

38 

10,904 

8,124 

1,185 

49 

25, .506 

13,298 

12,208 

2 

90 

42 

48 

21 

79 

24,872 

15,685 

7,321 

128 

126,198 

58,938 

56,524 

4 

93 

57 

36 

22 

28 

2,041 

996 

1,045 

63- 

118,333 

19,525 

19,069 

3 

68 

39 

29 

23 

22 

19,917 

19,227 

690 

50 

37,300 

18,058 

15,982 

5 

96 

.58 

38 

24 

29 

8,386 

4,338 

3,937 

65 

51,122 

24,233 

20,618 

2 

45 

30 

15 

25 

24 

892 

332 

560 

49 

27,209 

10,800 

10,141 

2 

46 

25 

21 

26 

33 

10,675 

8,064 

2,433 

55 

53,248 

38,815 

20,675 

4 

106 

57 

49 

27 

2 

144 

16 

128 

9 

3,564 

1,094 

1,060 

2 

19 

9 

10 

28 

2 

568 

568 


8 

4,116 

1,385 

1,544 

2 

18 

8 

10 

29 

12 

482 

210 

272 

22 

14,361 

7, S26 

5,981 

2 

29 

16 

13 

30 

14 

2,687 

2,201 

486 

31 

17,271 

10,546 

4,855 

2 

46 

29 

17 

31 

7 

122 

99 

23 

5 

1,981 

1,169 

812 





32 

30 

4,978 

3,795 

1,183 

43 

4i; 238 

15; 528 

14,492 

4 

43 

23 

20 

33 

22 

8,763 

7,418 

1,345 

16 

49,057 

30,681 

14,455 

1 

27 

15 

12 

34 

23 

6i 363 

5,843 

520 

26 

18,121 

9,515 

4,986 

1 

25 

12 

13 

35 

4 

245 

109 

136 

16 

9,406 

5,736 

3,670 

1 

23 

13 

10 

36 

9 

303 

147 

156 

29 

10,2.51 

5,005 

4,573 

1 

64 

27 

37 

37 

12 

303 

42 

261 

8 

4,436 

2,021 

1,483 

1 

29 

13 

16 

38 

21 

2,003 

1,311 

531 

24 

16,950 

8,895 

6,544 

2 

201 

120 

81 

39 

4 

45 

26 

19 

16 

6,212 

5,054 

1,008 

1 

9 

5 

4 

40 

27 

4,943 

3,991 

925 

25 

15,283 

7,517 

6,588 

2 

61 

37 

24 

41 

15 

h.374 

1,026 

348 

15 

13,567 

4,396 

4,212 

3 

78 

42 

36 

42 

9 

617 

'323 

126 

7 

6,611 

3,308 

2,622 

3 

68 

44 

24 

43 


101 

04 

37 

8 

12,318 

6,189 

5,861 





44 

7 

298 

56 

242 

13 

11,221 

8,540 

1,435 

2 

53 

30 

23 

45 

17 

948 

413 

535 

11 

21,275 

12,725 

7,400 

1 

20 

10 

10 

46 

4 

188 

27 

161 

4 

2,878 

990 

191 

2 

41 

25 

16 

47 

22 

1,131 

270 

861 

31 

38,767 

25,048 

5,856 

3 

117 

69 

48 

48 

4 

173 

59 

114 

16 

20,669 

12,757 

7,912 

1 

9 

5 

4 

49 

1 

43 

43 


6 

2,645 

1,524 

1,121 

1 

7 

3 

4 

.50 



10 

2 

5 

2,683 

2,371 

312 





51 

9 

1,441 

536 

604 

41 

25,145 

13;719 

7,613 

1 

30 

13 

17 

52 




17 

3,627 

2,436 

491 

1 

18 

10 

8 

53 





9 

2.069 

1,691 

378 





54 

3 

104 

85 

19 

7 

6,505 

3,792 

2,713 

1 

22 

10 

12 

55 













06 

19 

10 

1,365 

41,107 

4 82 

g«2 

35 

29,891 

19,474 

10,417 





57 

40,857 

250 

12 

13,814 

8^ 501 

5; 313 

1 

6 

3 

3 

58 

42 

13j003 

li;934 

1,069 

60 

78,333 

53,150 

18,471 

3 

62 

40 

22 

59 
































































1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 

9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 

21 

22 

23 

24 

25 

26 

27 

28 

29 

30 

31 

32 

33 

34 

35 

36 

37 

38 

39 

40 

41 

42 

43 

44 

45 

46 

47 

48 

49 

50 

51 

52 

53 

54 

55 

56 

57 

58 

59 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


CHILDREN IN BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS AT CLOSE OF THE YEAR, 


ALL INSTITUTIONS. 

INSTITUTIONS FOR 

CARE OF CHILDREN. 

Total 

number 

reported. 

Number 
reporting 
children 
at close of 
the year. 

Number 

reporting 

sex. 

Children in institutions at close of 
the year. 

Number 

of 

institu¬ 
tions re¬ 
porting. 

Inmates at close of the year. 

Total. 1 

With sex reported. 

Total. 1 

With sex reported. 

Male. 

Female. 

Male. 

Female. 

5.408 

2.521 

2,415 

150,976 

75,824 

68,512 

1.077 

108,070 

56,887 

46,785 

654 

279 

273 

12,348 

6,365 

5,524 

110 

9,023 

4,891 

3,891 

1,693 

755 

739 

63,035 

34,211 

28,008 

291 

44,963 

25,251 

19,207 

1,055 

552 

527 

27,980 

13,960 

11,452 

248 

20,153 

10,910 

7,338 

547 

269 

250 

11,610 

5,527 

5,245 ! 

93 

7,721 

3,901 

3,310 

578 

259 

242 

12,818 

5,386 

6,502 

139 

10,107 

4,347 

5,100 

203 

107 

102 

5,553 

2,211 

3,204 

50 

2,979 

1,266 

1,592 

210 

99 

90 

6,227 

2,917 

3,043 

53 

4,136 

1,971 

1.968 

176 

63 

56 

2,901 

1,195 

1,446 

24 

2,166 

913 

1,042 

292 

138 

136 

8,504 

4,052 

4,088 

69 

6,822 

3,437 

3,137 

56 

20 

20 

984 

515 

469 

11 

853 

450 

403 

62 

33 

33 

1.183 

591 

560 

17 

1,125 

565 

534 

24 

5 

5 

337 

209 

128 

2 

113 

95 

18 

360 

149 

147 

6,256 

3,052 

2,884 

48 

4,069 

2,122 

1,764 

56 

22 

19 

1,202 

574 

551 

11 

913 

451 

442 

96 

50 

49 

2,386 

1,424 

932 

21 

1,950 

1,208 

730 

800 

378 

372 

42,956 

23,673 

18.973 

144 

30,247 

17,065 

13,029 

207 

104 

102 

4,601 

2,123 

2,212 

45 

3,365 

1,595 

1,579 

686 

273 

265 

15,478 

8,415 

6,823 

102 

11,351 

6,591 

4,599 

310 

171 

165 

10,783 

5,366 

4,376 

100 

8.479 

4.463 

3,294 

177 

84 

83 

3,324 

1,847 

1,414 

44 

2,600 

1.482 

1,055 

325 

167 

158 

8,026 

3,925 

4,376 

63 

5,603 

3,128 

1,782 

136 

70 

63 

3,255 

1,526 

1,435 

23 

1,868 

972 

731 

107 

60 

58 

2,592 

. 1,296 

1,180 

18 

1,603 

865 

676 

128 

66 

61 

2.609 

1,333 

1,045 

16 

1,569 

914 

655 

103 

48 

42 

2,231 

1,087 

842 

18 

1.667 

824 

556 

159 

75 

68 

4,112 

1,699 

2.113 

31 

2,865 

1,274 

1,373 

18 

11 

11 

256 

128 

128 

2 

121 

59 

62 

17 

10 

10 

173 

92 

81 

2 

78 

43 

35 

50 

25 

25 

957 

502 

455 

9 

646 

344 

302 

72 

34 

33 

1,272 

686 

581 

15 

775 

443 

327 

23 

9 

7 

350 

200 

74 

5 

309 

179 

60 

137 

63 

60 

3,275 

1,207 

1,815 

33 

2,493 

1,016 

1,291 

72 

28 

27 

1,501 

6S3 

698 

14 

1,063 

537 

526 

98 

45 

43 

1,436 

584 

832 

27 

1,243 

491 

738 

34 

21 

19 

622 

254 

241 

8 

407 

139 

141 

63 

26 

26 

2,096 

993 

1,093 

16 

1,698 

794 

904 

38 

13 

13 

1.303 

614 

678 

10 

1,270 

602 

668 

81 

40 

38 

1.879 

759 

903 

20 

1,431 

557 

668 

32 

14 

9 

356 

92 

168 

6 

193 

32 

104 

89 

48 

45 

2,433 

902 

1,514 

21 

930 

449 

481 

57 

31 

30 

1,346 

561 

694 

14 

813 

313 

409 

36 

18 

18 

1,122 

501 

621 

8 

603 

271 

332 

21 

10 

9 

652 

247 

375 

7 

633 

233 

370 

36 

14 

14 

651 

288 

338 

7 

243 

96 

122 

61 

34 

33 

2,698 

1,370 

1,295 

24 

2,534 

1,290 

1,211 

19 

11 

10 

558 

266 

267 

4 

95 

50 

45 

94 

40 

33 

2,320 

993 

1,143 

18 

1,264 

535 

590 

26 

9 

9 

339 

160 

179 

2 

224 

99 

125 

11 

7 

7 

136 

69 

67 

2 

57 

26 

31 

8 

2 

2 

20 

12 

8 

1 

13 

9 

4 

72 

27 

21 

1,725 

719 

802 

12 

1,329 

623 

551 

27 

8 

8 

187 

25 

162 

2 

148 


148 

17 

3 

3 

45 

3 

42 

1 

41 


41 

14 

6 

5 

358 

163 

139 

3 

263 

112 

95 

1 

1 

1 

91 

44 

47 

1 

91 

44 

47 

71 

33 

32 

1,149 

617 

516 

10 

639 

402 

237 

32 

20 

20 

792 

333 

459 

6 

563 

235 

328 

1S9 

85 

84 

6,563 

3,102 

3,113 

53 

5,620 

2,800 

2,572 


1 Includes those whose sex was not reported. 







































































































SEX AND AGE OF 

BY CLASS OF INSTITUTION AND SEX, FOR DIVISIONS AND 


INMATES 

STATES: 1910. 


63 


SOCIETIES FOE PROTECTION AND CARE 

HOMES FOR ADULTS. OR ADULTS AND 










OF CHILDREN. 



CHILDREN. 


HOSPITALS AND 

SANITARIUMS. 

INSTITUTIONS FOR 

BLIND AND DEAF. 


Children in receiving homes at 


Children in institutions at close 


Children in institutions at close 


Children 

in institutions at 

Num- 

close of the year. 

Num- 

of the year. 


Num- 

of the year. 


Num- 

close of the year. 

ber of 




ber of 




ber of 




ber of 
















societies 

re- 


With sex reported. 

institu¬ 
tions re- 


With sex reported. 

institu¬ 
tions re- 


With sex reported. 

institu¬ 
tions re- 


With sex reported. 

porting. 

Total. 1 



porting. 

Total.' 



porting. 

Total. 1 



porting. 

Total. 1 



Male. 

Female. 

Male. 

Female. 

Male. 

Female. 

Male. 

Female. 









77 

3,562 

2,141 

1,225 

370 

17,382 

5,565 

10,361 

880 

12,356 

6,087 

5,679 

117 

9,606 

5,144 

4,462 

4 

41 

20 

21 

31 

984 

276 

551 

121 

1,538 

6,522 

753 

724 

13 

762 

425 

337 

24 

2,463 

1,541 

797 

110 

6,460 

2,581 

3,726 

298 

3,421 

3,068 

32 

2,627 

1,417 

1,210 

26 

632 

371 

261 

70 

3,389 

839 

1,971 

190 

2,033 

885 

864 

18 

1,773 

955 

818 

10 

124 

76 

48 

45 

1,527 

472 

872 

105 

958 

398 

415 

16 

1,280 

680 

600 

4 

56 

21 

35 

38 

1,214 

293 

718 

66 

547 

236 

244 

12 

894 

489 

405 





26 

1.477 

384 

479 

1,076 

23 

11 

172 

71 

101 

8 

925 

490 

435 

3 

49 

1 

2 

23 

1,112 

609 

89 

52 

37 

9 

841 

414 

427 

2 

54 

34 

20 

4 

236 

10 

177 

28 

125 

65 

60 

5 

320 

173 

147 

4 

143 

77 

41 

23 

983 

231 

661 

38 

372 

206 

166 

4 

184 

101 

83 









8 

16 

65 

31 

26 

34 

1 

66 

' 34 

32 









58 

26 





1 

208 

105 

103 

2 

16 

9 

7 





3 

33 

17 

16 

20 

683 

155 

391 

70 

1,040 

523 

517 

8 

431 

235 

196 

1 

8 

3 

5 

3 

28 

4 

4 

6 

179 

82 

60 

1 

74 

34 

40 





7 

65 

12 

53 

2,417 

19 

180 

82 

2,458 

80 

3 

191 

122 

69 

9 

2,115 

1,381 

684 

52 

4,495 

1,979 

155 

4,649 

2,183 

18 

1,450 

790 

660 

6 

182 

58 

49 

13 

339 

95 

244 

37 

581 

301 

280 

3 

134 

74 

60 

9 

166 

10? 

64 

45 

1,626 

507 

1,065 

106 

1,292 

662 

605 

11 

1,043 

553 

490 

4 

67 

39 

28 

18 

997 

231 

457 

46 

676 

337 

329 

3 

564 

296 

268 

11 

288 

178 

110 

8 

245 

88 

157 

20 

95 

56 

39 

1 

96 

43 

53 

4 

80 

53 

27 

24 

1.230 

221 

755 

71 

696 

287 

302 

5 

417 

236 

181 

3 

152 

78 

74 

10 

414 

97 

301 

30 

344 

121 

110 

4 

477 

258 

219 

4 

45 

23 

22 

10 

503 

202 

301 

23 

222 

84 

84 

5 

219 

122 

97 

3 

5 

4 

1 

11 

321 

107 

91 

34 

345 

100 

137 

2 

369 

208 

161 

2 

49 

33 

16 

9 

205 

65 

128 

17 

147 

76 

68 

2 

163 

89 

74 

3 

32 

17 

15 

15 

703 

154 

501 

22 

217 

108 

75 

4 

295 

146 

149 

1 

19 

12 

7 

1 

49 

27 

22 

5 

8 

6 

2 

2 

59 

24 

35 

1 

19 

10 

9 





5 

16 

9 

7 

2 

60 

30 

30 

3 

34 

18 

16 

11 

147 

73 

74 

2 

130 

67 

63 





6 

215 

101 

114 

11 

78 

26 

52 

2 

204 

116 

88 





1 

6 

( 2 ) 

28 

( 2 ) 

349 

3 

35 

21 

14 








7 

377 

19 

217 

69 

81 

4 

188 

94 

94 





6 

293 

74 

99 

6 

101 

51 

50 

2 

44 

21 

23 

2 

31 

10 

21 

3 

35 

12 

17 

12 

53 

26 

27 

1 

74 

45 

29 

1 

25 

11 

14 

2 

79 

41 

38 

9 

25 

11 

14 

1 

86 

52 

34 





5 

187 

86 

91 

4 

15 

9 

6 

1 

196 

104 

92 





2 

1 13 

( 2 ) 

52 

2 

1 

20 

12 

8 









9 

175 

112 

9 

70 

30 

40 

2 

203 

120 

83 

1 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

3 

1 49 

( 2 ) 

10 

3 

11 

7 

4 

1 

103 

53 

50 





15 

1,099 

267 

815 

10 

114 

38 

76 

2 

290 

148 

142 





6 

180 

67 

113 

8 

24 

12 

12 

3 

329 

169 

160 





5 

198 

50 

148 

2 

15 

7 

8 

3 

306 

173 

133 






3 

19 

14 

5 









4 

158 

61 

97 

1 

42 

25 

17 

2 

208 

106 

102 





5 

60 

28 

32 

3 

30 

18 

12 

2 

74 

34 

40 

1 

2 

15 

34 

( 2 ) 

1 

( 2 ) 

2 

4 

236 

658 

117 

273 

109 

371 





2 

212 

99 

113 

10 

7 

17 

9 

8 

3 

347 

175 

172 





1 

15 

9 

6 

5 

37 

17 

20 

1 

63 

35 

28 

1 

44 

24 

20 





3 

8 

6 

2 

1 

27 

13 

14 






1 

7 

3 

4 









2 

1 217 

( 2 ) 

168 

12 

61 

31 

30 

1 

118 

65 

53 

1 

10 

10 





4 

6 

3 

3 

1 

23 

12 

11 






2 

4 

3 

1 









1 

4 

1 

3 

1 

2 

2 

1 

89 

48 

41 
















1 

1 



8 

27 

9 

4 

368 

88 

126 

18 

226 

70 

13 

8 

107 

57 

62 

31 

45 

26 




t 

oD 

58 

31 

1 

26 

18 

8 

2 

50 

19 

6 

10 

527 

87 

365 

17 

208 

113 

95 

3 

158 

83 

75 


i 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 

9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

10 

17 

18 

19 

20 

21 

22 

23 

24 

25 

26 

27 

28 

29 

30 

31 

32 

33 

34 

35 

36 

37 

38 

39 

40 

41 

42 

43 

44 

45 

46 

47 

48 

49 

50 

51 

52 

53 

54 

55 

56 

57 

58 

59 


1 Not reported. 

























































































64 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


ADULTS IN BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS AT CLOSE OF THE YEAR, BY CLASS OF INSTITUTION AND SEX, 

FOR DIVISIONS AND STATES: 1910. 


Table 53. 

DIVISION OB STATE. 

ALL INSTITUTIONS. 

HOMES FOR ADULTS, OR ADULTS 
AND CHILDREN. 

HOSPITALS AND SANITARIUMS. 

INSTITUTIONS FOR BLIND 
AND DEAF. 

Total 

num¬ 

ber 

report¬ 

ed. 

Num¬ 
ber re¬ 
port¬ 
ing 
adult 
in¬ 
mates 
at 

close of 
the 
year. 

Num¬ 
ber re¬ 
port¬ 
ing sex. 

Adult inmates at close of 
the year. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
insti¬ 
tutions 
report¬ 
ing. 

Adult inmates at close 
of the year. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
insti¬ 
tutions 
report¬ 
ing. 

Adult inmates at close 
of the year. 

Num¬ 
ber 
of in- 
sti- 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Adult inmates at 
close of the year. 

Total. 1 

With sex 
reported. 

Total. 1 

With sex 
reported. 

Total. 1 

With sex 
reported. 

Total. 1 

W ith sex 
reported. 

Male. 

Female 

Male. 

Female. 

Male. 

Female. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

United States. 

5,408 

2,979 

2,932 

177,424 

103,648 

71,477 

1,358 

98,846 

59,677 

37,849 

1,526 

72,948 

41,054 

30,915 

95 

5,630 

2,917 

2,713 

Geographic divisions: 



















New England. 

654 

424 

418 

18,024 

9,450 

8,430 

219 

9,373 

5,069 

4,160 

196 

8,293 

4,201 

4,092 

9 

358 

ISO 

178 

Middle Atlantic. 

1,693 

884 

874 

58,257 

29,840 

27,777 

429 

28,902 

13,657 

14,806 

429 

28,035 

15,575 

12,259 

26 

1,320 

608 

712 

East North Central... 

1,055 

568 

561 

42,317 

26,667 

15,060 

254 

27,149 

18,761 

7,997 

298 

13,899 

7,201 

6,499 

16 

1,269 

705 

564 

West North Central.. 

547 

326 

318 

18,304 

11,208 

6,467 

121 

10,565 

7,035 

3,427 

191 

6,974 

3,773 

2,675 

14 

765 

400 

365 

South Atlantic. 

578 

291 

288 

13,686 

8, in 

5,141 

139 

8,339 

5,370 

2,954 

143 

4,806 

2,812 

1,941 

9 

541 

295 

246 

East South Central.... 

203 

108 

98 

5,357 

3,586 

1,771 

53 

3,584 

2,610 

974 

50 

1,448 

800 

648 

5 

325 

176 

149 

West South Central... 

210 

106 

104 

5,146 

2,776 

2,287 

51 

2,669 

1,116 

1,470 

47 

1,712 

1,270 

442 

8 

765 

390 

375 

Mountain. 

176 

107 

107 

4,770 

3,382 

1,388 

17 

1,278 

859 

419 

85 

3,334 

2,428 

906 

5 

158 

95 

63 

Pacific. 

292 

165 

164 

11,563 

8,262 

3,156 

75 

6,987 

5,200 

1,642 

87 

4,447 

2,994 

1,453 

3 

129 

68 

61 

New England: 



















Maine. 

56 

35 

35 

2,439 

2,059 

380 

16 

1,947 

1,795 

152 

18 

447 

239 

208 

1 

45 

25 

20 

New Hampshire. 

62 

39 

38 

732 

323 

395 

16 

371 

144 

213 

23 

361 

179 

182 





Vermont. 

24 

17 

17 

450 

223 

227 

8 

224 

129 

95 

9 

226 

94 

132 





Massachusetts. 

360 

240 

235 

9,790 

4,428 

5,232 

127 

4,387 

1,773 

2,484 

108 

5,170 

2,549 

2,621 

5 

233 

106 

127 

Rhode Island. 

56 

30 

30 

1,372 

728 

644 

17 

760 

349 

411 

13 

612 

379 

233 





Connecticut. 

96 

63 

63 

3,241 

1,689 

1,552 

35 

1,684 

879 

805 

25 

1,477 

761 

716 

3 

80 

49 

31 

Middle Atlantic: 



















New York. 

800 

453 

447 

35;719 

18,939 

16,462 

212 

17,197 

8,590 

8,490 

224 

17,715 

9,931 

7,583 

17 

807 

418 

389 

New Jersey. 

207 

108 

106 

5,859 

3,049 

2,561 

58 

3,467 

1,760 

1,458 

47 

2,249 

1,239 

1,010 

3 

143 

50 

93 

Pennsylvania. 

686 

323 

321 

16,679 

7,852 

8,754 

159 

8,238 

3,307 

4,858 

158 

8,071 

4,405 

3,666 

6 

370 

140 

230 

East North Central: 



















Ohio. 

310 

150 

148 

14,628 

9,517 

5,084 

80 

8,672 

6,264 

2,399 

67 

5,746 

3,151 

2,577 

3 

210 

102 

108 

Indiana. 

177 

83 

83 

5,502 

3,535 

1,967 

37 

3,852 

2,665 

1,187 

44 

1,274 

680 

594 

2 

376 

190 

186 

Illinois. 

325 

187 

184 

13,404 

7,961 

5,054 

83 

8,686 

5,590 

2,714 

99 

4,315 

2,137 

2,171 

5 

403 

234 

169 

Michigan. 

136 

85 

83 

3,959 

2,248 

1,537 

30 

2,311 

1,496 

815 

53 

1,575 

697 

704 

2 

73 

55 

18 

Wisconsin. 

107 

63 

63 

4,824 

3,406 

1,418 

24 

3,628 

2,746 

882 

35 

989 

536 

453 

4 

207 

124 

83 

West North Central: 



















Minnesota. 

128 

82 

79 

3,928 

2,042 

1,556 

28 

1,821 

1 060 

761 

54 

2,107 

982 

795 





Iowa. 

103 

59 

58 

2,697 

1,524 

1,101 

26 

1,556 

917 

639 

31 

'943 

497 

374 

2 

198 

110 

88 

Missouri. 

159 

87 

85 

4,935 

2,751 

2,034 

36 

2,275 

1,104 

1,068 

47 

2,427 

1,531 

849 

4 

233 

116 

117 

North Dakota. 

18 

11 

11 

222 

103 

119 

2 

99 

37 

62 

7 

79 

46 

33 

2 

44 

20 

24 

South Dakota. 

17 

10 

10 

697 

620 

77 

2 

548 

548 


6 

96 

43 

53 

2 

53 

29 

24 

Nebraska. 

50 

33 

32 

1,641 

812 

784 

13 

911 

449 

462 

18 

613 

299 

269 

2 

117 

64 

53 

Kansas. 

72 

44 

43 

4,184 

3,356 

796 

14 

3,355 

2,920 

435 

28 

709 

375 

302 

2 

120 

61 

59 

South Atlantic: 



















Delaware. 

23 

13 

13 

337 

143 

194 

9 

235 

85 

150 

4 

102 

58 

44 





Maryland. 

137 

63 

61 

3,075 

1,353 

1,677 

28 

1,454 

516 

923 

31 

1,511 

779 

702 

4 

110 

58 

52 

District of Columbia.. 

72 

38 

38 

3,040 

2,159 

881 

23 

2,235 

1,676 

559 

13 

715 

427 

288 

2 

90 

56 

34 

Virginia. 

98 

48 

48 

4,036 

3,278 

758 

25 

3,146 

2,657 

489 

23 

890 

621 

269 





West Virginia. 

34 

19 

19 

'708 

'352 

356 

4 

167 

15 

152 

14 

435 

284 

151 

1 

106 

53 

53 

North Carolina. 

63 

32 

32 

802 

441 

361 

10 

239 

150 

89 

21 

392 

197 

195 

1 

171 

94 

77 

South Carolina. 

38 

18 

17 

363 

95 

245 

13 

242 

21 

221 

5 

121 

74 

24 





Georgia. 

81 

40 

40 

1,052 

493 

559 

22 

533 

226 

307 

17 

455 

233 

222 

1 

64 

34 

30 

Florida. 

32 

20 

20 

273 

163 

110 

5 

88 

24 

64 

15 

185 

139 

46 





East South Central: 



















Kentucky. 

89 

55 

45 

1,892 

980 

912 

26 

1,066 

521 

545 

27 

655 

356 

299 

2 

171 

103 

68 

Tennessee. 

57 

31 

31 

2,631 

2,015 

616 

16 

2,146 

1,802 

344 

12 

331 

140 

191 

3 

154 

73 

81 

Alabama. 

36 

15 

15 

421 

292 

129 

10 

192 

142 

50 

5 

229 

150 

79 





Mississippi. 

21 

7 

7 

413 

299 

114 

1 

180 

145 

35 

6 

233 

154 

79 





West South Central: 



















Arkansas. 

36 

19 

19 

715 

414 

301 

7 

213 

66 

147 

10 

329 

256 

73 

2 

173 

92 

81 

Louisiana. 

61 

29 

27 

1,734 

714 

937 

18 

1,219 

402 

734 

9 

410 

254 

156 

2 

105 

58 

47 

Oklahoma. 

19 

8 

8 

157 

64 

93 

4 

69 

16 

53 

3 

17 

15 

2 

1 

71 

33 

38 

Texas. 

94 

50 

50 

2,540 

1,584 

956 

22 

1,168 

632 

536 

25 

956 

745 

211 

3 

416 

207 

209 

Mountain: 



















Montana. 

26 

18 

18 

535 

338 

197 

4 

192 

87 

105 

13 

323 

241 

82 

1 

20 

10 

10 

Idaho. 

11 

7 

7 

345 

275 

70 

1 

177 

177 


5 

145 

84 

61 

1 

23 

14 

9 

Wyoming. 

8 

6 

6 

201 

178 

23 

1 

53 

44 

9 

5 

148 

134 

14 





Colorado... 

72 

45 

45 

2,498 

1,604 

894 

9 

731 

429 

302 

35 

1,695 

1,129 

566 

1 

72 

46 

26 

New Mexico. 

27 

17 

17 

723 

623 

100 





16 

712 

617 

95 

1 

11 

6 

5 

Arizona. 

17 

6 

6 

140 

99 

41 





6 

140 

99 

41 





U tah. 

14 

8 

8 

328 

265 

63 

2 

125 

122 

3 

5 

171 

124 

47 

1 

32 

19 

13 

Nevada. 

1 


















Pacific: 



















Washington. 

71 

50 

50 

2,289 

1,538 

751 

19 

1,077 

747 

330 

31 

1,212 

791 

421 





Oregon. 

32 

22 

22 

1,532 

1,025 

507 

10 

'616 

463 

153 

12 

916 

562 

354 





California. 

189 

93 

92 

7; 742 

5,699 

1,898 

46 

5,294 

3,990 

1,159 

44 

2,319 

1,641 

678 

3 

129 

68 

61 


1 Includes those whose sex was not reported. 

































































































































SEX AND AGE OF INMATES. 


65 


The lack of exact classification by age and the indefi- 
inite use of the terms “adults” and “children” make 
any general comparison with the population unsatis¬ 
factory. The following statement, however, compar¬ 
ing the sex percentages of the general population with 
the percentages for the persons included in the tables 
of the report will be of interest: 


Table 54 

CLASS. 

Per cent 
males. 

Per cent 
females. 

Males to 
100 

females. 

Total population, 1910. 

51.4 

48.6 

106.0 

21 years of age and over. 

52.3 

47.7 

110.0 

Under 21 years of age. 

50.3 

49.7 

101.2 

Persons under care of benevolent institutions, 1910. 
Adults in homes for adults, or adults and 

56.0 

44.0 

127.1 

children. 

61.2 

38.7 

157.6 

Children in institutions for the care of children. 

55.0 

45.0 

121.9 


The dividing lines of age in the two statements are 
not identical. As already stated, under the head of 
adults are included a considerable number of females 
from 18 to 21 years of age and even younger, and prob¬ 
ably some males under 21. It is not probable, how¬ 
ever, that the percentages would be materially affected 
were the exact figures available, and the proportions 
shown may be accepted on the whole as fairly correct. 
The figures indicate, therefore, that the number of 
males who for one reason or another are recipients of 
general benevolence is considerably larger than the 
corresponding number of females. 

It is noticeable, however, that this preponderance 
of males is more evident in the figures for persons 
received into institutions during the year than in 
those for persons under then* care at the close of the 


year, as is shown by the following statement giving 
the percentages of males and females falling under 
these two heads for the several classes of institutions, 
and also the number of males to every 100 females: 


Table 55 

CLASS OF INSTITUTION. 

PERSONS UNDER CARE 
AT CLOSE OF THE 

year: 1910. 

PERSONS RECEIVED 
DURING THE YEAR: 

1910. 

Per 

cent 

males. 

Per 

cent 

fe¬ 

males. 

Males 
to 100 
fe¬ 
males. 

Per 

cent 

males. 

Per 

cent 

fe¬ 

males. 

Males 
to 100 
fe¬ 
males. 

All classes. 

Institutions for the care of children.. 
Societies for the protection and care 
of children. 

56.0 

55.0 

55.5 

57.5 
66.3 
52.9 

44.0 

127.1 

66.9 

33.1 

201.7 

45.0 

44.5 

42.5 
•43.7 
47.1 

121.9 

124.4 

135.3 
128. 8 

112.3 

62.6 

37.4 

166.7" 

Homes for adults, or adults and chil¬ 
dren . 

84.4 

57.9 

55.6 

15.6 

42.1 

44.4 

539.3 

135.8 

124.8 

Hospitals and sanitariums. 

Institutions for the blind and deaf.. 


The exceptionally large percentage of males received 
into homes for adults or adults and children is due 
chiefly to the fact that, as stated in a previous section 
of this report, of the transients provided for in munici¬ 
pal shelters, Salvation Army industrial homes and 
similar institutions, the overwhelming majority are 
men. So also the predominance of males in the figures 
for hospitals is due in large measure to the number of 
soldiers and sailors treated in the marine and post 
hospitals. It is also to be remembered that the pres¬ 
ence in homes for adults, or adults and children, of a 
large number of pensioned soldiers and sailors helps to 
raise the percentage of males for that class of 
institutions. 

The following table shows, by geographic divisions, 
the percentage of each sex under the various heads: 


Table 56 

DIVISION. 

PERSONS UNDER 
INSTITUTIONS AT 
THE year: 1910. 

CARE OF 
CLOSE OF 

inmates of institutions at close of the year: 1910. 

PERSONS RECEIVED INTO 
INSTITUTIONS DURING 

THE year: 1910. 

Per cent 
Male. 

Per cent 
female. 

Males 
to 100 
females. 

Adults. 

Children. 

Per cent 
male. 

Per cent 
female. 

Males 
to 100 
females. 

Per cent 
male. 

Per cent 
female. 

Males 
to 100 
females. 

Per cent 
male. 

Per cent 
female. 

Males 
per 100 
females. 

United States. 

56.0 

44.0 

127.1 

58.4 

40.3 

145.0 

52.5 

47.5 

110.7 

6« 9 

33.1 

201.7 

New England. 

52.4 

47.6 

110.2 

52.4 

46.8 

112.1 

51.5 

44.7 

115.2 

63.5 

36.5 

173.7 

Middle Atlantic. 

54.0 

46.0 

117.6 

51.2 

47.7 

107.4 

54.3 

44.4 

122.1 

70.9 

29.1 

243.9 

East North Central. 

59.5 

40.5 

147.1 

63.0 

35.6 

177.0 

54.9 

45.1 

121.9 

59.7 

40.3 

148.3 

West North Central. 

57.4 

42.6 

134.8 

61.2 

35.3 

173.3 

47.6 

45.2 

105.4 

60.0 

40.0 

149.8 

South Atlantic. 

54.5 

45.5 

119.5 

61.9 

37.6 

164.9 

42.0 

50.7 

82.8 

64.3 

35.7 

180.0 

East South Central. 

53.1 

46.9 

113.4 

66.9 

33.1 

202.4 

39.8 

57.7 

69.0 

56.2 

43.8 

128.2 

West South Central. 

53.7 

46.3 

115.8 

53.9 

44.4 

121.3 

46.8 

48.9 

95.9 

73.7 

26.3 

279.5 

Mountain. 

60.1 

39.6 

152.5 

70.9 

29.1 

243.6 

41.2 

49.8 

82.6 

64.2 

35.8 

179.6 

Pacific. 

60.6 

39.4 

153.8 

71.5 

27.3 

261.8 

47.6 

48.1 

99.1 

78.1 

21.9 

356.5 


PLACEMENT OF CHILDREN. 


As already stated, probably the most important 
feature distinguishing the present report from that for 
1904 is its record of placement of children in homes. 
That work, as conducted by institutions for the care of 
children, and by societies for the protection and care of 
children, is set forth in detail for each class of institu¬ 
tions in Tables 19 and 28, pages 28 and 36. 

Table 57 gives a general survey of the entire work, 
as conducted by these two classes of organizations. 

44153°—14 - 5 


Institutions which care for adults are omitted, because 
except perhaps in individual cases they do not engage 
in this line of work. 

It is to be remembered also that the totals given do 
not by any means represent the aggregate number of 
children placed, for no mention is made of the number 
placed by officials or organizations not included in this 
report, as officers of the poor, almshouses, reforma¬ 
tories, etc. 


















































































66 BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

CHILD-PLACING IN FAMILIES AND INSTITUTIONS DURING THE YEAR, BY DIVISIONS AND STATES: 1910 


Table 57 

DIVISION OR STATE. 

NUMBER OF INSTI¬ 
TUTIONS AND SOCI¬ 
ETIES DEVOTED 
SPECIFICALLY TO 
THE CARE OF 
CHILDREN. 

NUMBER OF 
ORGANIZATIONS 
REPORTING 
CHILDREN PLACED. 





CHILDREN PLACED 

DURING THE 

YEAR. 






Aggregate. 

In families. 

In institutions. 1 

To¬ 

tal. 

In¬ 

stitu¬ 

tions. 

Soci¬ 

eties. 

To¬ 

tal. 

In¬ 

stitu¬ 

tions. 

Soci¬ 

eties. 

To¬ 

tal.* 

With sex 
reported. 

Aggregate. 

By institutions. 

By societies. 

To¬ 

tal.* 

With sex 
reported. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

To¬ 

tal.* 

With sex 
reported. 

To¬ 

tal.* 

W ith sex 
reported. 

To¬ 

tal.* 

With sex 
reported. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

United States... 

1,352 

1,151 

201 

720 

522 

198 

40,360 

19,600 

15,555 

29,091 

13,566 

12,373 

15,072 

7,055 

6,949 

14,019 

6,511 

5,424 

11,269 

6,034 

3,182 

Geographic Divs.: 






















New England. 

136 

118 

18 

73 

55 

18 

4,635 

2,119 

2,163 

4,186 

1,893 

1,940 

2,358 

1,017 

988 

1,828 

876 

952 

449 

226 

223 

Middle Atlantic. 

374 

309 

65 

202 

139 

63 

15,602 

8,324 

4,553 

8,400 

3-, 853 

2, 736 

2,603 

1,292 

1,237 

5,797 

2,561 

1,499 

7, 202 

4,471 

1,817 

East North Central? 

323 

260 

63 

211 

148 

63 

7,415 

3,571 

3,321 

6,145 

3,088 

2,873 

4,030 

2,067 

1,867 

2,115 

1,021 

1,006 

1,270 

483 

448 

West North Central. 

115 

95 

20 

68 

48 

20 

4, 214 

2,063 

2,087 

3,804 

1,869 

1,871 

2,261 

1,109 

1,088 

1,543 

760 

783 

410 

194 

216 

South Atlantic. 

162 

152 

10 

67 

57 

10 

2,553 

1,087 

1,040 

1,892 

703 

763 

992 

279 

374 

'900 

424 

389 

661 

384 

277 

East South Central.. 

59 

55 

4 

24 

20 

4 

982 

537 

427 

692 

318 

356 

636 

273 

345 

56 

45 

11 

290 

219 

71 

West South Central. 

66 

58 

8 

24 

16 

8 

763 

206 

268 

677 

177 

211 

338 

93 

121 

339 

84 

90 

86 

29 

57 

Mountain. 

33 

28 

5 

12 

7 

5 

1,029 

351 

342 

661 

334 

327 

420 

211 

209 

241 

123 

118 

368 

17 

15 

Pacific. 

84 

76 

8 

39 

32 

7 

3,167 

1,342 

1,354 

2,634 

1,331 

1,296 

1,434 

714 

720 

1,200 

617 

576 

533 

11 

58 

New England: 






















Maine. 

14 

12 

2 

8 

6 

2 

447 

258 

189 

425 

247 

178 

90 

54 

36 

335 

193 

142 

22 

11 

11 

New Hampshire.... 

20 

17 

3 

13 

10 

3 

146 

61 

85 

88 

40 

48 

65 

33 

32 

23 

7 

16 

58 

21 

37 

Vermont. 

4 

4 


1 

1 


15 

15 


15 

15 


15 

15 








Massachusetts. 

59 

49 

10 

30 

20 

10 

2,895 

1,205 

1,337 

2,74lT 

1,125 

1,262 

1,411 

515 

543 

1,329 

610 

719 

155 

80 

75 

Rhode Island. 

14 

13 

1 

5 

4 

1 

193 

89 

104 

98 

40 

58 

71 

36 

35 

27 

4 

23 

95 

49 

46 

Connecticut. 

25 

23 

2 

16 

14 

2 

939 

491 

448 

820 

426 

394 

706 

364 

342 

114 

62 

52 

119 

65 

54 

Middle Atlantic: 






















New York. 

182 

154 

28 

103 

76 

27 

9,979 

6,418 

2,901 

3,802 

2,283 

1,365 

1,413 

723 

644 

2,389 

1,560 

721 

6,177 

4,135 

1,536 

New Jersey. 

62 

50 

12 

31 

20 

11 

1,826 

828 

747 

1,479 

633 

597 

499 

244 

243 

980 

389 

354 

347 

195 

150 

Pennsylvania. 

130 

105 

25 

68 

43 

25 

3,797 

1,078 

905 

3,119 

903 

754 

691 

325 

350 

2,428 

612 

424 

678 

141 

131 

E. North Central: 






















Ohio. 

122 

106 

16 

84 

68 

16 

2,400 

1,050 

884 

1,923 

982 

814 

1,628 

871 

718 

295 

111 

96 

477 

68 

70 

Indiana. 

80 

47 

33 

64 

31 

33 

1,591 

776 

777 

1,305 

627 

640 

695 

328 

329 

610 

299 

311 

286 

149 

137 

Illinois. 

69 

64 

5 

33 

28 

5 

1,461 

721 

740 

1,435 

714 

721 

808 

401 

407 

627 

313 

314 

26 

7 

19 

Michigan. 

27 

24 

3 

17 

14 

3 

1,204 

594 

591 

865 

433 

413 

552 

267 

266 

313 

166 

147 

339 

161 

178 

Wisconsin. 

25 

19 

6 

13 

7 

6 

759 

430 

329 

617 

332 

285 

347 

200 

147 

270 

132 

138 

142 

98 

44 

W. North Central: 






















Minnesota. 

23 

16 

7 

15 

8 

7 

993 

496 

497 

702 

371 

331 

524 

276 

248 

178 

95 

83 

291 

125 

166 

Iowa. 

20 

18 

2 

9 

7 

2 

1,290 

601 

625 

1,275 

593 

618 

733 

330 

339 

542 

263 

279 

15 

8 

7 

Missouri. 

37 

32 

5 

18 

13 

5 

831 

433 

398 

733 

374 

359 

438 

221 

217 

295 

153 

142 

98 

59 

39 

North Dakota. 

3 

2 

1 

2 

1 

1 

104 

59 

45 

103 

59 

44 

42 

24 

18 

61 

35 

26 

1 


1 

South Dakota. 

3 

2 

1 

3 

2 

1 

255 

112 

143 

254 

in 

143 

116 

49 

67 

138 

62 

76 

1 

1 


Nebraska. 

10 

9 

1 

7 

6 

1 

269 

136 

133 

269 

136 

133 

230 

122 

108 

39 

14 

25 




Kansas. 

19 

16 

3 

14 

11 

3 

472 

226 

246 

468 

225 

243 

178 

87 

91 

290 

138 

152 

4 

1 

3 

South Atlantic: 






















Delaware. 

6 

5 

1 

3 

2 

1 

193 

96 

97 

57 

27 

30 

23 

14 

9 

34 

13 

21 

136 

69 

67 

Maryland. 

38 

36 

2 

14 

12 

2 

753 

344 

383 

548 

231 

291 

208 

39 

143 

340 

192 

148 

205 

113 

92 

District of Columbia. 

15 

14 

1 

7 

6 

1 

366 

232 

134 

70 

33 

37 

46 

24 

22 

24 

9 

15 

296 

199 

97 

Virginia. 

34 

32 

2 

12 

10 

2 

319 

139 

180 

298 

137 

161 

75 

34 

41 

223 

103 

120 

21 

2 

19 

West Virginia. 

10 

9 

1 

9 

8 

1 

433 

120 

87 

432 

119 

87 

361 

72 

63 

71 

47 

24 

1 

1 


North Carolina. 

18 

17 

1 

9 

8 

1 

208 

102 

106 

206 

102 

104 

113 

58 

55 

93 

44 

49 

2 


2 

South Carolina. 

11 

10 

1 

4 

3 

1 

42 

25 

17 

42 

25 

17 

14 

9 

5 

28 

16 

12 




Georgia. 

22 

22 


5 

5 


104 

17 

16 

104 

17 

16 

104 

17 

16 







Florida. 

8 

7 

1 

4 

3 

1 

135 

12 

20 

135 

12 

20 

48 

12 

20 

87 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( s ) 

E. SouthCentral: 






















Kentucky. 

25 

25 


11 

11 


534 

223 

293 

534 

223 

293 

534 

223 

293 







Tennessee. 

17 

15 

2 

5 

3 

2 

173 

112 

61 

48 

23 

25 

29 

H 

18 

19 

12 

7 

125 

89 

36 

Alabama. 

10 

8 

2 

7 

5 

2 

264 

197 

67 

99 

67 

32 

62 

34 

28 

37 

33 

4 

165 

130 

35 

Mississippi. 

7 

7 


1 

1 


11 

5 

6 

11 

5 

6 

11 

5 

6 







W. South Central: 






















Arkansas. 

10 

9 

1 

3 

2 

1 

71 

35 

36 

71 

35 

36 

25 

13 

12 

46 

22 

24 




Louisiana. 

24 

24 


8 

8 


91 

45 

46 

91 

45 

46 

91 

45 

46 







Oklahoma. 

7 

5 

2 

3 

1 

2 

107 

56 

51 

107 

56 

51 

10 

5 

5 

97 

51 

46 




Texas. 

25 

20 

5 

10 

5 

5 

494 

70 

135 

408 

41 

78 

212 

30 

58 

196 

11 

20 

86 

29 

57 

Mountain: 






















Montana. 

4 

3 

1 

1 


1 

66 

29 

37 

66 

29 

37 




66 

29 

37 




Idaho. 

3 

2 

1 

3 

2 

1 

284 

144 

140 

280 

144 

136 

159 

75 

84 

121 

69 

52 

4 


4 

Wyoming. 

1 

1 


1 

1 


3 

1 

2 

3 

i 

2 

3 

1 

2 





Colorado. 

16 

14 

2 

6 

4 

2 

626 

154 

136 

262 

. 137 

125 

258 

135 

123 

4 

2 

2 

364 

i7 

u 

New Mexico. 

3 

2 

1 

1 


1 

50 

23 

27 

50 

23 

27 




50 

23 

27 




Arizona. 

2 

2 




















Utah. 

3 

3 




















Nevada. 

1 

1 




















Pacific: 






















Washington. 

15 

14 

1 

4 

3 

1 

862 

439 

423 

856 

435 

421 

326 

161 

165 

530 

274 

256 

6 

4 

*v 

Oregon. 

7 

6 

1 

4 

3 

1 

828 

346 

482 

790 

346 

444 

407 

139 

268 

383 

207 

176 

38 


38 

California. 

62 

56 

6 

31 

26 

5 

1,477 

557 

449 

988 

550 

431 

701 

414 

287 

287 

136 

144 

489 

7 

IS 


1 By societies, 


1 Includes those whose sex was not reported. 


* Not reported. 



























































































































































PLACEMENT OF CHILDREN. 


67 


Of the entire number of institutions specifically for 
the care of children, practically all the societies and 

45.4 per cent of the homes for children are engaged in 
this work. Of the total number of children placed by 
them 72.1 per cent were placed in families and 27.9 
per cent in institutions, these latter being placed en¬ 
tirely by the societies for the protection and care of 
children. Of those placed in families, 51.8 per cent 
w’ere placed by institutions for the care of children 
and 48.2 by societies for the protection and care of 
children, the average for the institutions being 29 and 
for the societies 71. 

The statistics in regard to the sex of the children 
placed are not fully satisfactory, as a number of organi¬ 
zations (12.9 per cent of the total) made no report on 
this point. Of the children whose sex was reported 
55.8 per cent were boys and 44.2 per cent girls. 
Of those placed by institutions, the boys and girls 
were almost equal; of those placed by societies in 
families, 54.6 per cent were boys and 45.4 per cent 
girls; and of those placed by societies in institutions, 

65.5 per cent were boys and 34.5 per cent girls. 

The following comparison of the number of boys 

and girls reported as placed in families and in institu¬ 
tions is of interest as showing the much greater pre¬ 
ponderance of boys among children placed in institu¬ 
tions as compared with those placed in families. Were 
it possible it would bo interesting to know just the 
type of institutions in which the children were placed. 


Table 58 


CHILDREN PLACED! 1910. 


DIVISION. 

Aggre¬ 

gate. 

In families. 

In institutions. 

Total. 1 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 1 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

United States.... 

40,360 

29,091 

13,566 

12,373 

11,269 

6,034 

3,182 

New England. 

4,635 

4,186 

1,893 

1,940 

449 

226 

223 

Middle Atlantic. 

15,602 

8,400 

3,853 

2,736 

7,202 

4,471 

1,817 

East North Central. 

7,415 

6,145 

3,088 

2,873 

1,270 

483 

448 

West North Central. 

4,214 

3,804 

1,869 

1,871 

410 

194 

216 

South Atlantic. 

2,553 

1,892 

703 

763 

661 

384 

277 

East South Central. 

982 

692 

318 

356 

290 

219 

71 

West South Central. 

763 

677 

177 

211 

86 

29 

57 

Mountain. 

1,029 

661 

334 

327 

368 

17 

15 

Pacific. 

3,167 

2,634 

1,331 

1,296 

533 

11 

38 


1 Includes those whose sex was not reported. 


The distribution by states of the number of organi¬ 
zations engaged in this work is given in Table 59, to¬ 
gether with the number of children placed, and the 
average per organization. 

New York is far in the lead in the number of chil¬ 
dren placed, owing very largely, as explained in con¬ 
nection with Table 26, to the work of three large child¬ 
placing societies. Pennsylvania comes next, followed 
by Massachusetts, Ohio, New Jersey, Indiana, Califor¬ 
nia, Illinois, Iowa, and Michigan. It is noticeable that 
the largest averages per institution are found in the 
North Pacific states, due to the fact that the principal 
effort in each state is made by an organization which 
has state-wide jurisdiction. 


Table 59 


CHILDREN PLACED : 1910. 


Number. 


STATE. 


Institu¬ 
tions re¬ 
porting. 


Total. 


Average 
per insti¬ 
tution. 


United States. 


720 


40,360 


56 


New York. 

Ohio. 

Pennsylvania. 

Indiana. 

Illinois. 

California. 

New Jersey. 

Massachusetts. 

Missouri. 

Michigan. 

Connecticut. 

Minnesota. 

Kansas. 

Maryland. 

New Hampshire.... 

Wisconsin. 

Virginia. 

Kentucky. 

Texas. 

Iowa. 

North Carolina.. 

West Virginia. 

Louisiana. 

Maine. 

Alabama. 

District of Columbia 

Nebraska. 

Colorado. 

Georgia. 

Rhode Island. 

Tennessee. 

Florida. 

Oregon. 

South Carolina. 

Washington. 

Arkansas. 

Delaware. 

Idaho.. 

Oklahoma. 

South Dakota. 

North Dakota. 

Mississippi.. 

Montana.. 

New Mexico.. 

Vermont.. 

Wyoming. 

Arizona.. 

Nevada. 

Utah. 


103 

84 

68 

64 

33 

31 

31 

30 

18 

17 

16 

15 

14 

14 

13 

13 

12 

11 

10 

9 

9 

9 

8 

8 

7 

7 

7 

6 

5 

5 

5 

4 

4 

4 

4 

3 

3 

3 

3 

3 

2 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 


9,979 
2,400 
3,797 
1,591 
1,461 
1,477 
1,826 
2,895 
831 
1,204 
939 
993 
472 
753 
146 
759 
319 
534 
494 
1,290 
208 
433 
91 
447 
264 
366 
269 
626 
104 
193 
173 
135 
828 
42 
862 
71 
193 
284 
107 
255 
104 
11 
66 
50 
15 
3 


97 

29 

56 

25 

44 

48 
59 
97 
46 
71 
59 
66 

34 
54 
11 
58 
27 

49 

49 
143 

23 
48 
11 
56 
38 
52 

38 
104 

21 

39 

35 
34 

207 

11 

216 

24 
64 
95 

36 
85 
52 
11 
66 

50 
15 

3 


A fact which should be kept in mind in connection 
with these statistics is that there is a certain amount 
of replacing of children. If the home selected for a 
child does not appear to be the best place for it, the 
society which selected the home is required to remove 
it and find another home. It is probable, however, 
that this has not been done to any great extent, at 
least to such a degree as to affect materially the totals 
or proportions. 

In general it should be said that this class of work ■ 
is by no means thoroughly organized. There are a 
considerable number of organizations whose existence 
as yet is merely formal, and which have not commenced 
active operations. Even in states which, like Indiana, 
have an elaborate system of boards of guardians, 
comparatively few are well established, and some seem 
to have acquired but a limited conception of the work 
they are organized to do. Of those that are in opera¬ 
tion, many seem to have considerable difficulty in 
realizing the necessity, or even advisability, of keeping 
exact and complete records. It is doubtless due to 
this that so many failed to make any report of sex. 
In a single state, out of 533 children reported as placed 
in institutions, the sex was reported for only 69. 





































































































68 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 


SUPERVISING AGENCY OF INSTITUTION. 


Table 60 gives by geographic divisions and states 
the number of the different classes of benevolent in¬ 
stitutions, classified according to character and super¬ 


vising agency, and Table 63 classifies in the same 
manner the inmates of such institutions at the close 
of the year. 


NUMBER OF BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS 1 CLASSIFIED ACCORDING TO CHARACTER AND SUPERVISING AGENCY, 

FOR DIVISIONS AND STATES: 1910. . 


Table 60 


DIVISION OR STATE. 


United States... 

Geographic divisions: 

New England. 

Middle Atlantic. 

East North Central.. 
West North Central. 

South Atlantic. 

East South Central.. 
West South Central.. 

Mountain. 

Pacific. 

New England: 

Maine. 

New Hampshire. 

Vermont. 

Massachusetts. 

Rhode Island. 

Connecticut. 

Middle Atlantic: 

New York. 

New Jersey. 

Pennsylvania. 

East North Central: 

Ohio. 

Indiana. 

Illinois. 

Michigan. 

Wisconsin. 

West North Central: 

Minnesota. 

Iowa. 

Missouri. 

North Dakota. 

■ South Dakota. 

Nebraska. 

Kansas. 

South Atlantic: 

Delaware. 

Maryland. 

District of Columbia. 

Virginia. 

West Virginia. 

North Carolina. 

South Carolina. 

Georgia. 

Florida. 

East South Central: 

Kentucky. 

Tennessee. 

Alabama. 

Mississippi. 

West South Central: 

Arkansas. 

Louisiana. 

Oklahoma. 

Texas. 

Mountain: 

Montana. 

Idaho. 

W yoming. 

Colorado.. 

New Mexico.. 

Arizona.. 

Utah.. 

Nevada.. 

Pacific: 

Washington.. 

Oregon.. 

California.. 


ALL INSTITUTIONS . 1 


institutions for care 

OF CHILDREN. 


HOMES FOR ADULTS, OR 
ADULTS AND CHILDREN. 


HOSPITALS AND 
SANITARIUMS. 


INSTITUTIONS FOR BLIND 
AND DEAF. 


Total number 1 
classified. 

Public. 

Private. 

Total. 

Public. 

Private. 

Total. 

Public. 

Private. 

Total. 

Public. 

Private. 

Total. 

Public. 

Private. 

i Protes¬ 

tant. 

Roman 

Catholic. 

Jewish. 

Other. 

Protes¬ 

tant. 

Roman. 

Catholic. 

Jewish. 

Other. 

Protes¬ 

tant. 

Roman 

Catholic. 

Jewish. 

Other. 

Protes¬ 

tant. 

Roman. 

Catholic. 

Jewish. 

Other. 

Protes¬ 

tant. 

Roman 

Catholic. 

Jewish. 

Other. 

4,629 

636 

905 

873 

75 

2,140 

1,151 

115 

273 

281 

25 

457 

1,435 

74 

456 

192 

30 

683 

1,918 

375 

174 

386 

20 

963 

125 

72 

2 

14 

. ... 

37 

591 

75 

75 

87 

4 

350 

118 

9 

17 

36 

1 

55 

228 

8 

54 

24 

3 

139 

232 

55 

4 

27 


146 

13 

3 




10 

1,286 

106 

237 

223 

31 

689 

309 

9 

56 

87 

12 

145 

445 

11 

157 

63 

10 

204 

500 

80 

24 

66 

9 

321 

32 

6 


7 


19 

928 

153 

174 

203 

18 

380 

260 

75 

49 

46 

6 

84 

266 

12 

89 

41 

7 

117 

380 

52 

35 

113 

5 

175 

22 

14 

i 

3 


4 

493 

75 

119 

125 

5 

169 

95 

8 

33 

27 


27 

126 

13 

37 

21 

4 

51 

256 

40 

49 

76 

1 

90 

16 

14 


1 


1 

513 

74 

124 

59 

9 

247 

152 

4 

48 

31 

3 

66 

154 

12 

56 

11 

4 

71 

193 

48 

20 

16 

2 

107 

14 

10 


1 


3 

188 

34 

61 

28 

1 

64 

55 

1 

33 

9 


12 

61 

5 

18 

8 


30 

62 

19 

9 

11 

1 

22 

10 

9 

i 




192 

36 

40 

44 

2 

70 

58 

2 

18 

17 

1 

20 

55 

5 

15 

S 


27 

70 

21 

7 

18 

1 

23 

9 

8 


1 



165 

35 

25 

43 

1 

61 

28 

4 

5 

8 


11 

21 

4 

6 

2 


9 

111 

22 

14 

33 

1 

41 

5 

5 





273 

48 

50 

61 

4 

110 

76 

3 

14 

20 

2 

37 

79 

4 

24 

14 

2 

35 

114 

38 

12 

26 


38 

4 

3 

.... 

1 



53 

5 

5 

7 


36 

12 

1 

1 

3 


7 

19 

1 

4 

1 


13 

21 

2 


3 


16 

1 

1 





59 

6 

6 

14 


33 

17 


3 

8 


6 

16 

1 

2 

2 


11 

26 

5 

1 

4 


16 







24 

2 

1 

4 


17 

4 





4 

9 

1 

1 

2 


5 

11 

1 


2 


8 







316 

42 

38 

43 

3 

190 

49 


8 

18 

1 

22 

130 

4 

27 

14 

2 

83 

129 

37 

3 

11 


78 

8 

1 




7 

50 

9 

7 

8 


26 

13 

1 

3 

4 


5 

19 

1 

4 

2 


12 

17 

6 


2 


9 

1 

1 





89 

11 

18 

11 

1 

48 

23 

7 

2 

3 


11 

35 


16 

3 

1 

15 

28 

4 


5 


19 

3 





3 

646 

61 

114 

136 

16 

319 

154 

3 

23 

53 

6 

69 

221 

5 

78 

37 

4 

97 

253 

50 

13 

40 

6 

144 

18 

3 


6 


9 

175 

21 

23 

35 

3 

93 

50 

1 

3 

15 

1 

30 

59 

4 

18 

7 

1 

29 

63 

15 

2 

12 

1 

33 

3 

1 


1 


1 

465 

24 

100 

52 

12 

277 

105 

5 

30 

19 

5 

46 

165 

2 

61 

19 

5 

78 

184 

15 

9 

14 

2 

144 

11 

2 




9 

275 

69 

53 

48 

10 

95 

106 

51 

11 

17 

3 

24 

83 

3 

32 

11 

5 

32 

81 

13 

10 

19 

2 

37 

5 

2 


1 


2 

140 

32 

24 

24 

1 

59 

47 

18 

7 

5 


17 

40 

3 

10 

5 

1 

21 

51 

9 

7 

14 


21 

2 

2 





290 

18 

66 

73 

6 

127 

64 

2 

23 

10 

3 

26 

88 

4 

29 

15 

1 

39 

132 

9 

14 

47 

2 

60 

6 

3 


1 


2 

125 

18 

16 

21 


70 

24 

1 

3 

6 


14 

31 

1 

11 

4 


15 

66 

13 

1 

11 


41 

4 

3 

i 




98 

16 

15 

37 

1 

29 

19 

3 

5 

8 


3 

24 

1 

7 

6 


10 

50 

8 

3 

22 

1 

16 

5 

4 


1 



116 

17 

31 

28 

1 

39 

16 

2 

5 

7 


2 

29 

1 

n 

6 

1 

10 

69 

12 

15 

15 


27 

2 

2 





99 

14 

23 

27 


35 

18 

2 

7 

3 


6 

27 

1 

7 

6 


13 

52 

9 

9 

18 


16 

2 

2 





130 

12 

31 

37 

4 

46 

32 

1 

13 

11 


7 

37 

2 

10 

7 

3 

15 

57 

7 

8 

18 

1 

23 

4 

2 


1 


1 

17 

4 

4 

5 


4 

2 



1 


1 

2 

1 




1 

11 

1 

4 

4 


2 

2 

2 





15 

6 

2 

5 


2 

2 


1 



1 

2 

2 





9 

2 

1 

5 


1 

2 

2 





48 

12 

15 

8 


13 

9 

2 

3 

2 


2 

14 

3 

6 

2 


3 

23 

5 

6 

4 


8 

2 

2 





68 

10 

13 

15 


30 

16 

1 

4 

3 


8 

15 

3 

3 



9 

35 

4 

6 

12 


13 

2 

2 





19 

1 

3 

4 


11 

5 



3 


2 

9 


2 

1 


6 

5 

1 

1 



3 







115 

13 

27 

20 

7 

48 

36 


12 

11 

2 

11 

31 

2 

11 

3 

3 

12 

43 

8 

4 

5 

2 

24 

5 

3 


1 


1 

58 

1C 

15 

9 

1 

23 

14 

2 

3 

4 


5 

26 

3 

10 

3 

1 

9 

16 

5 

2 

2 


7 

2 





2 

89 

9 

21 

7 


52 

32 


10 

4 


18 

27 

2 

8 

2 


15 

29 

6 

3 

1 


19 

1 

1 





31 

5 

3 

8 


15 

9 



4 


5 

5 


1 

1 


3 

16 

4 

2 

3 


7 

1 

1 





59 

7 

17 

4 


31 

17 

1 

9 

2 


5 

10 

1 

3 



6 

31 

4 

5 

2 


20 

1 

1 





34 

7 

13 

1 


13 

10 

1 

4 



5 

14 

2 

9 



3 

9 

3 


1 


5 

1 

1 





77 

12 

21 

5 

1 

38 

22 


8 

2 

1 

11 

26 

1 

11 

1 


13 

27 

9 

2 

2 


14 

2 

2 





31 

10 

4 

1 


16 

7 


2 

1 


4 

6 

1 

1 



4 

17 

8 

1 



8 

j 1 

1 





83 

9 

30 

14 

1 

29 

25 


16 

3 


6 

31 

1 

9 

5 


16 

25 

6 

5 

6 

1 

7 

2 

2 





51 

12 

13 

5 


21 

15 

i 

8 

1 


5 

17 

2 

4 

2 


9 

16 

7 


2 


7 

3 

2 

l 




33 

8 

10 

7 


8 

8 


5 

3 



11 

1 

5 

1 


4 

11 

4 


3 


4 

3 

3 





21 

5 

8 

2 


6 

7 


4 

2 


1 

2 

1 




1 

10 

2 

4 



4 

2 

2 





34 

8 

7 

7 


12 

9 


4 

1 


4 

8 

1 

2 

1 


4 

15 

5 

1 

5 


4 

2 

2 





57 

7 

13 

19 

2 

16 

24 


6 

12 

i 

5 

19 

2 

4 

4 


9 

12 

4 

3 

2 

1 

2 

2 

1 


1 



17 

3 

4 

1 


9 

5 


2 



3 

4 


1 



3 

6 

1 

1 

1 


3 


2 





84 

18 

16 

17 


33 

20 

2 

6 

4 


8 

24 

2 

8 

3 


11 

37 

11 

2 

10 


14 

3 

3 





24 

6 

2 

10 


6 

3 

1 


1 


1 

4 

1 


1 


2 

16 

3 

2 

8 


3 

1 

1 





10 

3 

1 

3 


3 

2 





2 

1 

1 





6 

1 

1 

3 


1 

1 

1 





8 

5 

1 



2 

1 


1 




1 

1 





6 

4 




2 







69 

10 

11 

18 

1 

29 

14 

2 

1 

4 


7 

9 

1 

4 

1 


3 

45 

6 

6 

13 

1 

19 

1 

1 





23 

4 

2 

6 


11 

2 


1 

1 



1 





1 

19 

3 

1 

5 


10 

1 

1 





16 

3 

3 

4 


6 

2 


1 

1 



2 





2 

12 

3 

2 

3 


4 







14 

3 

5 

2 


4 

3 


1 

1 


1 

3 


2 



1 

7 

2 

2 

1 


2 

1 

1 





1 

1 





1 

i 























69 

15 

14 

15 


25 

14 

1 

3 

1 


9 

19 

1 

7 

3 


8 

36 

13 

4 

11 


8 







30 

4 

4 

11 


11 

6 



3 


3 

11 

1 

3 

2 


5 

12 

2 

1 

6 


3 

1 

1 





174 

29 

32 

35 

4 

74 

56 

2 

11 

16 

2 

25 

49 

2 

14 

9 

2 

22 

66 

23 

7 

9 

.... 

27 

3 

2 

.... 

1 




1 Not including dispensaries or societies for the protection and care of children. 








































































































































































































































































































SUPERVISING AGENCY OF INSTITUTION. 


69 


In the report for 1904, there was a general classifica¬ 
tion of institutions as public, private, and ecclesiasti¬ 
cal. As stated in that report, “the first group com¬ 
prised all those directly supervised and maintained by 
the Federal Government, individual states or civil 
divisions of the latter; the second, all those managed 
by private corporations not subject to the control of 
any general body or organization, though a few estab¬ 
lishments maintained by fraternal orders were in¬ 
cluded; and the third, all institutions directly super¬ 
vised and supported by religious denominations, 
orders, or groups of churches.” 

The present report has adopted the general classifi¬ 
cation of institutions into public and private, including 
under the former head institutions operated under 
federal, state, county, and municipal authority, and 
under the latter head, other institutions operated under 
the laws governing private corporations, associations, 
or individual enterprises. 

The private institutions have been subclassified into 
those under the supervision of Protestant, Roman 
Catholic, Jewish, and other private organizations, 
respectively. Under the head of Protestant are in_ 
eluded all institutions that are distinctively Protestant 
in character, as indicated by their title, description, or 
avowed purpose, whether under the direct control of 
an ecclesiastical body, or merely affiliated with one. 
Under the head of Roman Catholic are included both 
those institutions which are operated directly by the 
Roman Catholic Church or a religious order of that 


church, and those conducted by members of some 
Roman Catholic order and popularly recognized as 
Roman Catholic, although not owned by the order. 
Under the head of “Other private institutions” are 
included all private organizations not specifically be¬ 
longing under one of the other heads. Among these 
last are the majority of private hospitals, and homes 
and hospitals under the control of fraternal or bene¬ 
ficiary organizations. 

Dispensaries and societies for the protection and care 
of children have been omitted from this classification. 
In many cases it is difficult to decide whether the so¬ 
cieties should be regarded as public or private, while 
the majority of the dispensaries are either identified 
with hospitals already included in the classification or 
are of very vague and uncertain type in this respect. 

The following tables show the per cent distribution, 
according to supervising agency, of the institutions 
and of their inmates: 


Table 61 

PER CENT OF UNITED STATES TOTAL: 1910. 

CLASS OF INSTITUTION. 

Public 

Private institutions. 


institu¬ 

tions. 

Protes¬ 

tant. 

Roman 

Catholic. 

Jewish. 

Other. 

All classes. 

13.7 

19.6 

18.9 

1.6 

46.2 

Institutions for the care of children . 

10.0 

23.7 

24.4 

2.2 

39.7 

Homes for adults, or adults and chil¬ 
dren . 

5.2 

31.8 

13.4 

2.1 

47.6 

Hospitals and sanitariums. 

19.6 

9.1 

20.1 

1.0 

50.2 

Institutions for blind and deaf. 

57.6 

1.6 

11.2 


29.6 


TaMe 62 


PER CENT OP UNITED STATES TOTAL: 1910. 


CLASS OF INSTITUTION. 

All inmates. 

Adults. 

Children. 

In pub¬ 
lic in¬ 
stitu¬ 
tions. 

In private institutions. 

In pub¬ 
lic in¬ 
stitu¬ 
tions. 

In private institutions. 

In pub¬ 
lic in¬ 
stitu¬ 
tions. 

In private institutions. 

Protes¬ 

tant. 

Roman 

Catho¬ 

lic. 

Jewish. 

Other. 

Protes¬ 

tant. 

Roman 

Catho¬ 

lic. 

Jewish. 

Other. 

Protes¬ 

tant. 

Roman 

Catho¬ 

lic. 

Jewish. 

Other. 

All classes. 

Institutions for the care of children. 

Homes for adults, or adults and children ... 

Hospitals and sanitariums. 

Institutions for blind and deaf. 

26.2 

117 

30.7 

2.4 

28.7 

37.0 

10.4 

21.8 

1.4 

29.5 

13.8 

13.4 

41.6 

3.6 

27.6 

8.5 

36.4 

28.1 

68.6 

15.5 

12.3 

8.4 

0.3 

46.5 

24.3 

23.2 

10.0 

4.6 
1.2 

1.7 

25.0 

25.7 

38.6 

21.1 

42.1 

27.5 

68.9 

12.4 

8.6 

0.3 

20.5 

24.0 

12.3 

1.4 

1.7 

23.7 

38.2 

18.5 

8.5 

4.2 

31.5 

68.4 

15.5 

11.7 

7.1 

0.2 

46.5 
46.2 

18.6 
8.6 

4.6 

0.4 

1.9 

25.0 

37.6 

40.9 

22.8 


A comparison of Tables 61 and 62 shows a marked 
difference in the rank of the different classes of agen¬ 
cies in respect to the number of institutions and of 
inmates. In total number of institutions “Other” 
private institutions lead, followed by Protestant, Ro¬ 
man Catholic, Public, and Jewish. In total number of 
inmates Roman Catholic institutions lead, followed by 
“Other” Private, Public, Protestant, and Jewish. 
The public institutions form only 13.7 per cent of the 
total number, but report 27.2 per cent of the inmates. 


Protestant institutions number 19.6 per cent of the 
total, but report only 11.6 per cent of the inmates; 
while the Roman Catholic institutions number 18.9 
per cent of the total, but report 30.4 per cent of the 
inmates. Of the total number of adults reported, 37 
per cent are in public institutions, 21.8 per cent in 
Roman Catholic institutions, and 10.4 per cent in 
Protestant institutions; of the children 15.8 per cent 
are in public, 13.1 per cent in Protestant, and 40.7 
per cent in Roman Catholic institutions. 































































1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

C 

7 

8 

9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 

21 

22 

23 

24 

25 

26 

27 

28 

29 

30 

31 

32 

33 

34 

35 

36 

37 

38 

39 

40 

41 

42 

43 

44 

45 

46 

47 

48 

49 

50 

51 

52 

53 

54 

55 

56 

57 

5S 

59 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


OF BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS 1 AT CLOSE OF THE YEAR, BY CLASS OF INSTITUTION, 


ALL INMATES OF BENEVOLENT 
INSTITUTIONS. 2 

Total. 

In public institutions. 

In private institutions. 

Protestant. 

Roman 

Catholic. 

Jewish. 

Other. 

324,838 

85,886 

38,195 

99,815 

7,845 

93,097 

30,331 

7,716 

1,814 

9,291 

208 

11,302 

118,829 

18,260 

12,45,5 

44,911 

4,826 

38,377 

69,665 

25,192 

7,281 

17,940 

1,654 

17,598 

29, 790 

11,485 

4,709 

7,808 

110 

5,678 

26,448 

7,445 

4,956 

5,025 

385 

8,637 

10,910 

4,287 

2,157 

2,329 

24 

2,113 

11,324 

3,586 

1,577 

3,301 

249 

2,611 

7,617 

2,276 

1,037 

2,490 

107 

1,707 

19,924 

5,639 

2,209 

6,720 

282 

5,074 

3,423 

1,932 

50 

555 


886 

1,915 

155 

121 

906 

23 

710 

787 

116 

7 

288 


376 

16,013 

4,168 

969 

5,250 

176 

5,450 

2,566 

596 

224 

942 


804 

5,627 

749 

443 

1,350 

9 

3,076 

76,560 

12, S41 

6,391 

32,456 

3,878 

20,994 

10,278 

2,249 

683 

3,934 

140 

3,272 

31,991 

3,170 

5,381 

8,521 

808 

14,111 

25,344 

9,960 

2,050 

6,421 

743 

6,170 

8,538 

4,382 

953 

1,569 

19 

1,615 

21,350 

5,998 

3,077 

5,443 

867 

5,965 

7,062 

2,172 

544 

2,118 


2,228 

7,371 

2,6S0 

657 

2,389 

25 

1,620 

* 6,532 

1,941 

1,279 

1,946 

10 

1,356 

4,879 

2,145 

606 

1,2.37 


891 

9,015 

1,562 

2,001 

3,079 

ioo 

2,273 

459 

153 

71 

102 


133 

851 

671 

81 

73 


26 

2,598 

1,160 

453 

710 


275 

5,456 

3,853 

218 

661 


724 

687 

11 

59 

278 


339 

6,350 

897 

765 

2,463 

385 

1,840 

4,541 

2,050 

401 

775 


1,315 

5,441 

2,590 

731 

540 


1,580 

1,305 

331 

92 

444 


438 

2,898 

567 

1,057 

160 


1,114 

1,666 

290 

925 

43 


408 

2,931 

525 

778 

279 


1,349 

629 

184 

148 

43 


254 

4,325 

949 

874 

1,441 

24 

1,037 

3,977 

2,451 

364 

410 


752 

1,543 

511 

451 

366 


215 

1,065 

376 

468 

112 


109 

1,366 

607 

208 

196 


355 

4,432 

562 

675 

2,262 

249 

684 

700 

288 

121 



291 

4,826 

2,129 

573 

843 


1,281 

874 

185 

80 

472 


137 

437 

227 

23 

124 


63 

221 

139 

13 



69 

4,223, 

1,088 

451 

i, 4i8 

107 

1,164 

900 

414 

71 

241 


174 

185 

15 

87 

60 


23 

686 

122 

312 

175 


77 

91 

91 





3,403 

883 

374 

1,217 


929 

2,266 

252 

271 

1,063 


680 

14,255 

4,504 

1,564 

4,440 

282 

3,465 


108,070 


o 


9,023 
44,963 
20,153 
7,721 
10,107 
2,979 
4,136 
2,166 
6,822 


853 

1,125 

113 

4,069 

913 

1,950 


30,247 
3,365 
11,351 


8,479 

2,600 

5.603 
1,868 

1.603 


1,569 

1,667 

2,865 

121 

78 

646 

775 


309 
2,493 
1,063 
1,243 
407 
1,698 
1,270 
1,431 
193 


930 

813 

603 

633 


243 
2,534 
95 
1,264 


224 

57 

13 

1,329 

148 

41 

263 

91 


639 

563 

5,620 


REN IN 

INSTITUTIONS FOR CARE OF 
CHILDREN. 

m 





Q 

o 

In private institutions. 






p 





-*-> 










a 





_© 

a 




3 

p 

CO 

© 

eI 

A 

TO 

t-’ 

Ph 

O 

© a 

£ 

S 

G 

HH 

PH 


© 

o 

9,133 

16,779 

50,201 

4,985 

26,972 

866 

520 

5,061 

62 

2,514 

1,111 

4,078 

25,812 

3,368 

10,594 

4,692 

2,790 

6,506 

1,063 

5,102 

1,315 

2,221 

2,846 


1,339 

406 

3,383 

2,621 

147 

3,550 

26 

1,614 

780 


559 

332 

995 

1,950 

120 

739 

334 

145 

1,195 


492 

51 

1,033 

3', 430 

225 

2,083 

64 

15 

450 


324 


82 

744 


299 





113 


207 

2,958 

62 

842 

183 

96 

520 


114 

619 

120 

389 


822 

240 

1,850 

19,805 

2,872 

5,480 

27 

76 

1,972 

56 

1,234 

844 

2,152 

4,035 

440 

3,880 

2,989 

678 

2,744 

595 

1,473 

780 

492 

397 


931 

379 

1,283 

1,530 

468 

1,943 

197 

132 

913 


626 

347 

205 

922 


129 

256 

353 

777 


183 

593 

315 

392 


367 

4 

1,322 

1,173 


366 



102 


19 


59 



19 

264 

99 

186 


97 

198 

73 

216 


288 



189 


120 


273 

1,453 

147 

620 

185 

169 

400 


309 


499 

143 


601 



181 


226 


984 

80 


634 

221 

829 



220 


539 

132 


760 


90 

43 


60 


545 

234 


151 

26 

282 

170 


335 1 


339 

264 




448 

112 


73 


79 

79 


85 


449 

1,542 

i20 

423 


55 



40 

332 

412 

329 


191 



176 


48 





57 


13 




243 

21 

734 


331 


38 

110 




41 





32 

175 


56 

9i 





9 

116 

145 


369 



329 


234 

42 

917 

2,956 

225 

1,480 


INMATES OF HOMES FOE ADULTS, OR 
ADULTS AND CHILDREN. 3 


Adults. 


o 

e 


98,846 


9,373 
28,902 
27,149 
10,565 
8,339 
3,584 
2,669 
1,278 
6,987 


1,947 

371 

224 

4,387 

760 

1,684 


17,197 
3,467 
8,238 


8,672 

3,852 

8,686 

2,311 

3,628 


1,821 
1,556, 
2,275' 
99 
548 
911 
3,355 


235 

1,454 

2,235 

3,146 

167 

239 

242 

533 

88 


1,066 

2,146 

192 

180 


213 

1,219 

69 

1,168 


192 

177 

53 

731 


125 


1,077 

616 

5,294 


In public institu¬ 

tions. 

In private institutions. 

Protestant. 

Roman 

Catholic. 

Jewish. 

Other. 

41,607 

12,216 

20,243 

1,337 

23,443 

2,704 

1,046 

2,285 

89 

3,249 

5,330 

5,792 

7,778 

874 

9,128 

15,464 

2,193 

4,204 

150 

5,138 

6,209 

693 

1,840 

59 

1,764 

4,119 

995 

1,31S 

108 

1,799 

2,221 

406 

596 


361 

1,017 

403 

855 


394 

541 

286 

190 


261 

4,002 

402 

1,177 

57 

1,349 

1,751 

35 

30 


131 

94 

27 

39 

23 

188 

99 

7 

65 


53 

630 

573 

1,409 

57 

1,718 

130 

122 

2S5 


223 


282 

457 

9 

936 

3,662 

3,217 

4,502 

582 

5,234 

1,127 

598 

865 

23 

854 

541 

1,977 

2,411 

269 

3,040 

4,923 

731 

1,129 

63 

1,826 

2,844 

204 

454 

19 

331 

4,628 

808 

1,637 

68 

1,545 

1,221 

220 

535 


335 

1,848 

230 

449 


1,101 

528 

221 

595 

10 

467 

850 

125 

376 


205 

544 

225 

646 

49 

811 

40 




59 

548 





536 

93 

223 


59 

3,163 

29 



163 


35 

89 


111 

122 

257 

506 

108 

461 

1,486 

203 

262 


284 

2,183 

155 

270 


538 


15 

125 


27 

145 

43 



51 

48 

83 



111 

113 

173 

66 


181 

22 

31 



35 

237 

247 

396 


186 

1,726 

70 

200 


150 

78 

89 



25 

180 




80 

101 

10 


22 

188 

142 

677 


212 


45 



24 

749 

115 

168 


136 

91 


80 


21 

177 





53 





220 

164 

no 


237 







122 



3 






690 

59 

190 


138 

134 

35 

134 


313 

3,178 

308 

853 

57 

898 


Not including dispensaries and societies for the protection and care of children. 













































































































































































































































































SUPERVISING AGENCY OF INSTITUTION 


71 


AGE, AND SUPERVISING AGENCY OF INSTITUTION, FOR DIVISIONS AND STATES: 1910. 


INMATES OF HOMES 
FOE ADULTS, OE ADULTS 

and childeen 3 —continued. 


Children. 


C3 

o 


•9 . 

OT 

Rg 

.o'-3 

a 

ft 


17,382 


984 

6,460 

3,3S9 

1,527 

1,214 

1,477 

1,112 

236 

983 


208 

683 

28 

65 


4,495 

339 

1,626 


997 

245 

1,230 

414 

503 


321 

205 

703 

49 


34 

215 


6 

377 

293 

35 

79 

187 

13 

175 

49 


1,099 

180 

198 


158 

60 

236 

658 


15 


217 


722 


2,034 


4 

606 

112 


519 

8: 


23 

88 


In private 
institutions. 


a? 

o 

hi 

ft 


8,027 


129 

707 

660 

176 

101 

58 

70 


133 


621 

3,812 

1,391 

497 

432 

576 

87 

16S 

443 


8? 

6 

41 


306 

9 

392 


181 

82 

198 

119 

80 


92 

49 

26 


28 


13 

31 

11 


33 

2 

23 


29 

10 

31 


a . 

a .2 

a§ 

a 


208 

401 


12 


2,934 

168 

710 


513 

95 

199 

214 

370 


7 

50 

440 


326 

31 


75 


536 

40 


25 


62 


168 


62 


6,537 


57 

5 


57 


173 

1,330 

1,338 

742 

681 

843 

955 

68 

407 


139 

22 

12 


734 

75 

521 


303 

68 

833 

81 

53 


222 

106 

236 

49 


2 

127 


6 

23 

253 

35 

4 

178 


144 

38 


530 

138 

175 


133 

31 

226 

565 


15 

’•49 

"4 


INMATES OF HOSPITALS AND SANITARIUMS. 3 


Adults. 


1 






-*-> 

In private institutions. 


o§ 






0 

9 




'oS 

3 

<0 

og 

i 

<£> 

O 

Pi 

h-i 

l-H 

ft 

ft 6 

£ 

<D 

0 

72,948 

20,083 

6,246 

17,531 

1,223 

27,865 

8,293 

3,285 

115 

1,174 


3,719 

28,035 

7,878 

1,513 

5,453 

464 

12,727 

13,899 

2,048 

1,385 

5,113 

358 

4,995 

6,974 

1,706 

1,474 

2,232 

45 

1,517 

4,806 

1,579 

395 

546 

113 

2,173 

1,448 

745 

60 

324 

21 

298 

1,712 

655 

109 

324 

115 

509 

3,334 

912 

582 

886 

107 

847 

4,447 

1,275 

613 

1,479 


1,080 

447 

6 


70 


371 

361 

55 

10 

112 


184 

226 

17 


15 


194 

5,170 

2,934 

io5 

426 


1,705 

612 

151 


119 


342 

1,477 

122 


432 


923 

17,715 

6,055 

747 

3,427 

329 

7,157 

2,249 

590 

( 3 i 

744 

58 

857 

8,071 

1,233 

766 

1,282 

77 

4,713 

5,746 

1,193 

353 

1,893 

72 

2,235 

1,274 

253 

164 

582 


275 

4,315 

251 

702 

1,846 

261 

1,255 

1,575 

219 

36 

327 


993 

989 

132 

130 

465 

25 

237 

2,107 

682 

568 

480 


377 

943 

338 

110 

310 


185 

2,427 

554 

411 

717 

45 

700 

79 

10 

66 

(*) 


3 

96 

3 

20 

67 


6 

613 

39 

194 

275 


105 

709 

80 

105 

383 


141 

102 

11 




91 

1,511 

465 

177 

129 

113 

627 

715 

367 

13 

82 


253 

890 

333 

72 

115 


370 

435 

137 

71 

58 


169 

392 

54 

21 

71 


246 

121 

21 


23 


77 

455 

132 

27 

68 


228 

185 

59 

14 



112 

655 

241 

45 

222 

21 

126 

331 

207 


( 3 ) 


124 

229 

115 


102 


12 

233 

182 

15 



36 

329 

146 

28 

40 


115 

410 

221 

55 

6 

115 

13 

17 

5 

11 

( 3 ) 


1 

956 

283 

15 

278 


380 

323 

11 

63 

• 197 


52 

145 


21 

118 


6 

148 

86 




62 

1,695 

421 

265 

380 

107 

522 

712 

378 

32 

131 


171 

140 

15 

43 

60 


22 

171 

1 

158 

( 3 ) 


12 

1,212 

175 

174 

623 


240 

916 

82 

225 

507 


104 

2,319 

1,018 

216 

349 


736 


Children. 


Total. 

In public institu¬ 

tions. 

In private 
institutions. 

Protestant. 

Roman 

Catholic. 

Jewish. 

Other. 

12,356 

3,889 

882 

2,296 

238 

5,051 

1,538 

531 

4 

150 


853 

6,522 

2,726 

365 

904 

115 

2,412 

2,033 

239 

225 

539 

83 

947 

958 

215 

145 

313 

6 

279 

547 

70 

82 

78 

17 

300 

172 

55 

9 

53 

3 

52 

89 

13 


48 

14 

14 

125 

11 

24 

51 


39 

372 

29 

28 

160 

.... 

155 

65 



5 


60 

58 

6 

2 

11 


39 

16 



( 3 ) 


16 

1,040 

459 

2 

56 


523 

179 

58 


18 


103 

180 

8 

.... 

60 

.... 

112 

4,649 

2,081 

271 

744 

93 

1,460 

581 

258 

( 3 ) 

77 

3 

243 

1,292 

387 

94 

83 

19 

709 

676 

134 

107 

132 

13 

290 

95 

33 

11 

41 


10 

696 

38 

86 

148 

70 

354 

344 

13 

9 

129 


193 

222 

21 

12 

89 

.... 

100 

345 

106 

45 

87 


107 

147 

3 

7 

109 


28 

217 

48 

17 

23 

6 

123 

8 


5 

( 3 > 

.... 

3 

16 

7 

2 

6 


1 

147 

51 

58 

26 


12 

78 


11 

62 

.... 

5 

35 


24 



11 

217 

42 

30 

19 

17 

109 

101 

12 

7 



82 

53 


5 

12 


36 

25 

2 

6 

5 


12 

15 

1 

( 3 ) 

9 


5 

20 



20 



70 

13 

8 

13 


36 

11 


2 



9 

114 

10 

4 

53 

3 

44 

24 

19 


( 3 ) 


5 

15 

12 

.... 

( 3 ) 


3 

19 

14 

5 




42 



42 



30 

11 


( 3 ) 

14 

5 




(3) 



17 

2 

( 3 ) 

' '6 

.... 

9 

37 


17 

19 


1 

8 


2 

6 



T 





7 

61 

9 

1 

26 


25 

6 

2 

1 

( 3 ) 


3 

4 


3 

3 ) 


1 

2 



( 3 ) 


2 

107 

9 

14 

58 


26 

57 

10 

7 

35 


5 

208 

10 

7 

67 

.... 

124 


INMATES OF INSTITUTIONS FOE BLIND AND DEAF. 


Adults. 


o 

ft 


5.630 


358 

1,320 

1,269 

765 

541 

325 

765 

158 

129 


45 


233 

“80 


807 

143 

370 


210 

376 

403 

73 

207 


198 

233 

44 

53 

117 

120 


110 

90 


106 

171 

( 3 ) 

64 


171 

154 


( 3 ) 


173 

105 

71 

416 


20 

23 


72 

11 


32 


3,881 


.9 . 

m 

o a 
a a 
a 73 
3 
ft 


70 

131 

1,152 

718 

447 

316 

762 

158 

127 


45 

‘25 


91 

40 


167 

376 

376 

66 

167 


198 

186 

44 

53 

117 

120 


106 


106 

171 

( 3 ) 

64 


171 

145 


( 3 ) 


In private 
institutions. 


16 


a . 
a .a 

a! 

° a 


694 


612 

63 

10 

4 


173 

102 

71 

416 


72 

11 


32 


514 

98 


23 

'46 


10 


1,039 


288 

57? 

47 

37 

90 


208 

"80 


202 

5 

370 


43 

“4 


37 


9,606 


762 

2,627 

1,773 

280 

894 

925 

841 

320 

184 


90 


( 3 ) 


( 3 ) 


Children. 


66 


431 

74 

191 


1,450 

134 

1,043 


564 

96 

417 

477 

219 


369 

163 

295 

59 

60 
130 
204 


188 

44 

74 

86 

196 

( 3 ) 

203 

103 


290 

329 

306 

( 3 ) 


208 

74 

212 

347 


118 

23 


•9 . 

CO 

Si 

ja* 3 

a 

ft 


6,571 


256 

478 

1,597 

210 

824 

924 

807 

320 

155 


66 


116 

74 


193 

120 

165 


554 

96 

326 

456 

165 


369 

163 

225 

59 

60 
130 
204 


162 


74 

86 

196 

( 3 ) 

203 

103 


290 

328 

306 

( 3 ) 


208 

40 

212 

347 


118 

23 


89 


In private 
institutions. 


22 


9j§ 


823 


21 


21 


540 

124 

70 

26 


34 


29 


530 

10 


10 


60 

‘54 


70 


26 


34 


2,190 


506 
1,609 
31 


43 

4-3 

O 


44 


315 


191 


727 

4 

878 


31 


44 


( 3 ) 


2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 


11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 


17 

18 
19 


20 

21 

22 

23 

24 


25 

26 

27 

28 

29 

30 

31 


32 

33 

34 

35 

36 

37 

38 

39 

40 


41 

42 

43 

44 


45 

46 

47 

48 


49 

50 

51 

52 

53 

54 

55 

56 


57 

58 

59 


368 

88 

527 


11 

6 

116 


201 

58 

184 


156 

24 

227 


129 


127 


26 

158 


26 

129 


29 


3 Exclusive of those not classified by age. 


3 Not reported. 



















































































































































































































































































































































72 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 


FINANCES OF INSTITUTIONS. 


The general summary of the income, expenditures, 
and value of property of institutions is given in Tables 
12-16 preceding. Tables 64-69 show for each class of 
institutions the amount of income from public appro¬ 
priations, from donations, and from care of inmates; 
the amount disbursed for running expenses; and the 
value of land, buildings, and equipment owned. 

Under the heading “Public appropriations” are in¬ 
cluded all funds received from federal, state, county, 
or municipal authorities, whether in the form of regular 
appropriations or subsidies or of specific grants. 

Under the heading “Donations” are included per¬ 
sonal gifts, legacies, public collections, receipts from 
entertainments, appropriations by philanthropic or 
missionary societies, assessments by fraternal or bene¬ 
ficiary organizations, and other receipts of this type. 

Under the heading “Care of inmates” are included 
all sums paid into the institutions for the care of indi¬ 
viduals, whether by the individuals themselves, by 
friends, or by organizations. 

Under the heading “Other sources” in the general 
tables are grouped all receipts not classified by the 
institutions themselves, together with those which it 
was impracticable to include under any one of the other 
three heads—“Public Appropriations,” “Donations,” 
or “Care of inmates.” Income from invested funds 
rentals, interest, proceeds of labor of inmates or sales 
of products, and loans are some of the receipts so 
included. In regard to the last-named, it should be 
stated that wherever the amounts were known, loan 
transactions have been eliminated. Cash balances 
were also eliminated from both receipts and payments, 
wherever it was possible to ascertain the amount of 
such balances. In general, therefore, the term “Other 
sources” was of necessity so elastic as to render it 
inadvisable to present separately the receipts included. 

In dealing with expenditures, it was also found 
difficult to distinguish between “Running expenses” 
and “Permanent improvements.” The cost of a new 
building, of an annex to an old one, or of a new piece 
of land could be easily classified, but it became evident, 
from an examination of the schedules received, that in 
a number of cases considerable amounts representing 
costs of improvements had been included under 
“Running expenses.” The statistics, therefore, are 
not as exact as could be wished. In many cases the 
total expense only was given, and when further in¬ 
quiry failed to elicit specific information, it was 
assumed that the entire amount expended was for 
“ Running expenses.” Because of the resulting incom¬ 
pleteness of the returns, no special summary for “Per¬ 
manent improvements” is given. 

With regard to the value of property, certain con¬ 
ditions must be kept in mind. There is no uniform 
basis for appraisal or estimate of the value of land, 
buildings, etc. In a number of cases, a hospital, an 
orphanage, or a home for the aged is only a part of a 
great institution, and to decide what part of the entire 
property should be regarded as belonging to the par¬ 


ticular benevolent institution under consideration is 
practically impossible. This is true of a considerable 
number of the Roman Catholic homes, and of practi¬ 
cally all of the United States post hospitals. Another 
factor to be considered is the difference between origi¬ 
nal cash cost and present market value, some insti¬ 
tutions apparently giving the original cost, others the 
market value. As far as the requisite data were 
obtainable the valuation given in this report for 
properties belonging to an institution represents the 
equity of the institution in such properties, being the 
total valuation less such obligations as are secured by 
mortagages or deeds of trust pledging the properties 
for the payment of debt obligations. The amounts 
given under “Invested funds” seem to be limited in 
some cases to bonds, stocks, etc. In other cases they 
apparently include the value of investments in real 
estate whose rentals are reckoned as income. 

Another, and possibly even more important, phase 
of the subject is the evident lack of careful accounting 
by the institutions. In many cases the figures given 
on the schedules apparently bore little or no relation 
to the questions asked, and considerable correspond¬ 
ence was required in order to secure a statement that 
should fairly represent the situation. 

Comparison with report for 190 4 .—These conditions, 
combined with apparently different bases of inquiry, 
make any satisfactory comparison with the report for 
1904, as already intimated, difficult and unsatisfactory. 
That report made no reference to receipts from dona¬ 
tions, to value of property, or to expenditures for per¬ 
manent improvements. It reported “Annual subsi¬ 
dies from public funds,” but apparently did not include 
special appropriations under this head, as is done in 
the present report. Income from pay inmates also 
seems to have been limited in the 1904 report to pay¬ 
ments by inmates, whereas under the corresponding 
head in this report are included, not merely direct 
payments, but receipts for this purpose from relatives 
or friends, benevolent organizations, etc. That there 
is a radical difference in the basis of report is evident 
from a comparison of the averages. According to the 
report for 1904, the total income from pay inmates 
for 4,207 institutions was $14,848,508, an average per 
institution of $3,529. Out of 5,408 institutions covered 
by the present report, 2,710 reported their total in¬ 
come under this head as $30,320,289, an average per 
institution of $11,188. Even assuming that in 1904, 
as in 1910, only half the total number of institutions 
reported receipts from this source, the average for 
1904 would be $7,057, showing an average gain per 
institution of $4,131, an increase which could scarcely 
be possible if the statistics in the two reports were on 
the same basis. 

The situation is essentially the same in regard to the 
amounts given in the two reports for “Running expen¬ 
ses” and “Cost of maintenance,” which would seem 
to be comparable. The total amount reported in 
1904 for “Cost of maintenance” was $55,577,633, an 





FINANCES OF 

average per institution of $13,211; or if the same 
allowance be made as in 1910 for institutions not 
reporting (22 per cent), an average of $16,939. In 
the 1910 report the total given for running expenses 
is $94,658,836, an average per institution reporting of 
$22,220. That there should have been a gain of $5,281 
in the average cost of maintenance, or running expen- 


INSTITUTIONS. 73 

ses, for so large a number of institutions of such dif¬ 
ferent types, is scarcely possible, and it seems clear, 
as already indicated, page 22, that the terms “Cost 
of maintenance” and “Running expenses,” as used in 
the two reports, are not identical in meaning, and that 
the statistics given under these heads are therefore 
not comparable. 


PUBLIC APPROPRIATIONS RECEIVED DURING THE YEAR, BY CLASS OF INSTITUTION, FOR DIVISIONS AND 

STATES: 1910. 


Table 64 


DIVISION OR STATE. 


United States... 

Geographic divisions: 

New England. 

Middle Atlantic. 

East North Central.. 
West North Central. 

South Atlantic. 

East South Central.. 
West South Central. 

Mountain. 

Pacific. 

New England: 

Maine. 

New Hampshire. 

Vermont. 

Massachusetts. 

Rhode Island. 

Connecticut. 

Middle Atlantic: 

New York. 

New Jersey. 

Pennsylvania. 

East North Central: 

Ohio . 

Indiana. 

Illinois. 

Michigan. 

Wisconsin. 

West North Central: 

Minnesota. 

Iowa. 

Missouri. 

North Dakota. 

South Dakota....... 

Nebraska. 

Kansas. 

South Atlantic: 

Delaware. 

Maryland. 

District of Columbia. 

Virginia. 

West Virginia. 

North Carolina. 

South Carolina. 

Georgia. 

Florida. 

East South Central: 

Kentucky. 

Tennessee. 

Alabama. 

Mississippi. 

West South Central: 

Arkansas. 

Louisiana. 

Oklahoma. 

Texas. 

Mountain: 

Montana. 

Idaho. 

Wyoming. 

Colorado. 

New Mexico. 

Arizona. 

Utah. 

Nevada. 

Pacific: 

Washington. 

Oregon. 

California.. 


ALL INSTITUTIONS. 


Num¬ 
ber re- 


Total 

port- 

Appropria- 

num- 

mg ap- 

tions re- 

ber. 

pro- 

pria- 

tions. 

ported. 

5,408 

1,896 

$37,677,802 

654 

180 

3,477,083 

1,693 

685 

15,939,366 

1,055 

360 

7,361,026 

3,643,691 

547 

150 

578 

219 

2,308,343 

203 

72 

1,198,604 

210 

74 

1,241,897 

176 

47 

812,807 

292 

109 

1,694,985 

56 

31 

497,847 

62 

23 

60,496 

24 

3 

24,825 

360 

67 

2,064,637 

56 

16 

250,470 

96 

40 

578,808 

800 

361 

10,071,204 

207 

68 

1,206,182 

686 

256 

4,661,980 

310 

120 

2,935,084 

177 

83 

1,074,377 

325 

85 

1,856,780 

632,945 

136 

42 

107 

30 

861,840 

128 

32 

723,732 

103 

30 

504,487 

1,048,434 

159 

21 

18 

5 

34,569 

17 

5 

301,609 

50 

10 

256,334 

72 

47 

774,526 

23 

6 

12,863 

137 

81 

533,812 

72 

25 

448,696 

98 

32 

581,976 

34 

8 

150,714 
195,365 

63 

18 

38 

9 

58,644 

271,678 

81 

28 

32 

12 

54,595 

89 

28 

391,742 

57 

24 

495,196 

36 

11 

148,590 

21 

9 

163,076 

36 

11 

285,114 

61 

38 

379,356 

19 

4 

80,562 

94 

21 

496,865 

26 

12 

123,280 

11 

6 

107,493 

8 

2 

17,919 

72 

12 

364,916 

27 

9 

132,294 

14 

5 

47,905 

1 

1 

19,000 

71 

21 

202,567 

32 

15 

97,496 

189 

73 

1,394,922 


INSTITUTIONS 
FOR CARE OF 
CHILDREN. 

SOCIETIES FOR 
PROTECTION 
AND CARE OF 
CHILDREN. 

HOMES FOR 
ADULTS, OR 
ADULTS AND 
CHILDREN. 

HOSPITALS AND 
SANITARIUMS. 

DISPENSARIES. 

INSTITUTIONS 
FOR BLIND AND 
DEAF. 

Num¬ 
ber 
of in¬ 
stitu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Amount 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber 
of so¬ 
cieties 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Amount 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber 
of in¬ 
stitu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Amount 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber 
of in¬ 
stitu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Amount 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber 
of in¬ 
stitu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Amount 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber 
of in¬ 
stitu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Amount. 

reported. 

457 

$5,516,694 

95 

$699,413 

312 

$8,986,645 

876 

$17,906,058 

61 

$217,992 

93 

$4,351,000 

25 

171,105 

4 

18,608 

21 

789,737 

115 

2,236,768 

6 

13,145 

9 

247,720 

147 

2,945,086 

29 

462,788 

102 

1,978,087 

360 

9.473,524 

26 

32,340 

21 

1,047,541 

119 

1,221,825 

31 

49, 241 

46 

2,653,975 

144 

2,450,366 

6 

32,187 

14 

953,432 

28 

293,029 

9 

12,971 

31 

1,360,480 

64 

1,251,896 

4 

91,358 

14 

633,957 

44 

171,010 

5 

73,751 

47 

645,827 

99 

1,009,641 

12 

34,939 

12 

373,175 

13 

47,976 

4 

4,381 

15 

427,514 

31 

398,324 

2 

3,823 

7 

316,586 

24 

117,880 

5 

2,247 

17 

265,579 

17 

387,120 

3 

7,500 

8 

461,571 

9 

160,267 

3 

30,950 

8 

124,092 

22 

287,805 



5 

209,693 

50 

388i 516 

5 

44,476 

25 

741,354 

24 

410;614 

2 

2,700 

3 

107,325 

7 

15,500 

1 

3,500 

5 

383,050 

16 

78,047 

1 

250 

1 

17,500 


6,761 



2 

23,535 

14 

30,200 









1 

20,825 

2 

4,000 





1 

25 



7 

180;066 

50 

1,726,574 

4 

11,945 

5 

146,027 

3 

35,300 

1 

3,625 

3 

34; 025 

8 

149,520 



1 

28,000 

7 

113,519 

2 

11,483 

3 

148,236 

25 

248;427 

1 

950 

2 

56;193 

102 

2,635,824 

15 

342,134 

46 

1,416,742 

163 

5,022,679 

21 

19,740 

14 

634,085 

8 

19,444 

2 

51,029 

6 

293,411 

48 

793,198 

3 

4,100 

1 

45,000 

37 

289,818 

12 

69,625 

50 

267,934 

149 

1 3,657,647 

2 

1 8,500 

6 

368,456 

58 

657,335 

10 

18,022 

5 

825,647 

40 

1,169,381 

4 

13,587 

3 

251,112 

27 

222,550 

16 

26,039 

14 

515,184 

23 

147,931 

1 

12,000 

2 

150,673 

23 

168,487 

1 

3,420 

16 

662,354 

41 

777,081 

1 

6,600 

3 

238,838 

5 

48,764 

1 

460 

5 

182,139 

28 

218,773 



3 

182,809 

6 

124,689 

3 

1,300 

6 

468;651 

12 

137,200 



3 

130,000 

5 

100,645 

4 

7,487 

3 

100,250 

16 

352,206 

2 

9,000 

2 

154,144 

7 

104,726 

2 

2,347 

4 

165,061 

14 

133,903 

1 

3,750 

2 

94,700 

1 

13,680 

2 

2,987 

6 

146,496 

9 

671,953 

1 

78,608 

2 

134,710 





2 

4,705 

1 

126 



2 

29,738 





2 

256,189 

1 

420 



2 

45,000 

2 

26,780 



3 

120,490 

3 

24,164 



2 

84,900 

13 

47,198 

1 

150 

11 

567,289 

20 

69,124 



2 

90,765 

1 

978 

4 

1,885 

1 

10,000 


21 

71,063 

1 

500 

19 

48,746 

30 

362; 826 

6 

8,039 

4 

42,638 

5 

50,310 

1 

70,710 

6 

19,913 

10 

226,218 

1 

400 

2 

81,145 

4 

1,550 

1 

1,500 

6 

502,850 

17 

54,576 

3 

11,500 

1 

10,000 

2 

13 240 

1 

63 



4 

77,411 



1 

60,000 

3 

16,800 


3 

30,625 

11 

61,548 



1 

86; 392 

2 

9 997 



3 

5; 596 

4 

43,051 




5 

s;560 



7 

32; 297 

13 

155,821 

1 

5,000 

2 

73,000 

2 

2 490 



3 

5,800 

6 

26,305 



1 

20,000 

7 

40,476 



5 

55,850 

13 

180,838 

1 

1,192 

2 

113,386 

5 

4,740 

2 

2,198 

6 

305,241 

7 

86,090 

1 

2,631 

3 

94,296 

1 

2,760 

2 

2,183 

3 

19,017 

4 

53,346 



1 

71,284 



1 

47,406 

7 

78,050 



1 

37,620 


1 son 

1 

500 

2 

30 300 

5 

89,368 



2 

163,146 

18 

60,422 


12 

59,111 

5 

229; 823 

2 

4,500 

1 

25,500 

1 

472 

1 

90 





2 

80,000 

5 

55,658 

3 

1,275 

2 

176,078 

7 

67,929 

1 

3,000 

3 

192,925 

2 

23 200 



3 

26,072 

6 

19,208 



1 

44,800 


32 263 

1 

22,050 

1 

28 000 

1 

180 



1 

25 ; 000 



1 

Hi 919 

1 

3,000 





74,254 

2 

8,900 

2 

54; 741 

4 

134,628 



1 

92,393 

o 



8 

119,794 



1 

12,500 













l 

1 550 



1 

360 

2 

10,995 



1 

35,000 

l 

IQ ooo 










31,924 

Q 7QQ 

l 

4 870 


87,461 

8 

78,312 






l 

4 ’ 885 

4 

28 252 

5 

44;560 



1 

10,000 

41 

346,793 

3 

34; 721 

14 

625,641 

11 

287; 742 

2 

2,700 

2 

97,325 


i Entire state appropriation for tuberculosis work reported under South Mountain Sanatorium, Mont Alto, Pa. 




















































































































































74 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

DONATIONS RECEIVED DURING THE YEAR, BY CLASS OF INSTITUTION, FOR DIVISIONS AND STATES: 1910. 


Table 65 

DIVISION OR STATE. 

ALL INSTITUTIONS. 

INSTITUTIONS 
FOR CARE OF 
CHILDREN. 

SOCIETIES 

FOR PROTECTION 
AND CARE OF 
CHILDREN. 

HOMES FOR 
ADULTS, OR 
ADULTS AND 
CHILDREN. 

HOSPITALS AND 
SANITARIUMS. 

DISPENSARIES. 

INSTITUTIONS 
FOR BLIND AND 
DEAF. 

Total 

num¬ 

ber. 

Num¬ 
ber re¬ 
port¬ 
ing 
dona¬ 
tions. 

Donations 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber 
of in¬ 
stitu¬ 
tions 
report¬ 
ing. 

Amount 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber 
of so¬ 
cieties 
report¬ 
ing. 

Amount 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber 
of in¬ 
stitu¬ 
tions 
report¬ 
ing. 

Amount 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber 
of in¬ 
stitu¬ 
tions 
report¬ 
ing. 

Amount 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber 
of in¬ 
stitu¬ 
tions 
report¬ 
ing. 

Amount 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber 
of in¬ 
stitu¬ 
tions 
report¬ 
ing. 

Amount 

reported. 

United States. 

5,408 

3,088 

$19,697,598 

801 

$4,510,101 

129 

$823,060 

966 

$4,762,385 

1,034 

$9,061,841 

120 

$401,146 

38 

$139,065 

Geographic divisions: 
















New England. 

654 

413 

2,663,390 

79 

340,175 

14 

108,488 

156 

763,782 

139 

1.379,696 

18 

33,045 

7 

38,204 

Middle Atlantic. 

1,693 

1,046 

7,907,296 

243 

1,662,881 

46 

260,058 

319 

1,628,151 

362 

4,205,567 

56 

114,535 

20 

36,104 

East North Central.... 

1,055 

589 

4,008,123 

139 

944,046 

23 

177,418 

185 

1,076,349 

216 

1,583,362 

21 

187,261 

5 

39,687 

West North Central.... 

547 

274 

1,514,187 

68 

321,433 

17 

114,762 

75 

341,057 

105 

703,597 

7 

20,118 

2 

13,220 

South Atlantic. 

578 

322 

1,164,350 

111 

546,804 

9 

58,304 

102 

280,203 

89 

257,162 

10 

16,098 

1 

5,779 

East South Central.... 

203 

111 

463,660 

44 

242,726 

2 

4,076 

37 

112,157 

25 

98,764 

2 

5,116 

1 

821 

West South Central.... 

210 

108 

553,123 

43 

188,427 

7 

11,634 

39 

169,673 

16 

176,001 

2 

7,138 

1 

250 

Mountain.... 

176 

65 

600,492 

18 

69,209 

4 

40,784 

7 

134,406 

35 

355,893 

1 

200 



Pacific... 

292 

160 

822,977 

56 

194;400 

7 

47; 536 

46 

256i607 

47 

301,799 

3 

17,635 

1 

5,000 

New England: 
















Maine. 

56 

36 

62,729 

9 

25,118 

2 

314 

13 

9,432 

11 

27,315 

1 

550 



New Hampshire 

62 

35 

47,590 

8 

11,642 

1 

187 

10 

13,860 

16 

2i; 901 





Vermont. .*. 

24 

12 

35,982 

2 

10,536 



4 

9,736 

6 

15 ', 710 





Massachusetts. 

360 

244 

1,751,002 

42 

227434 

8 

89,889 

99 

597; 402 

77 

775,559 

13 

22,828 

5 

38,090 

Rhode Island. 

56 

30 

164,710 

8 

29,097 

1 

1,726 

11 

70,527 

9 

62,706 

1 

654 



Connecticut. 

96 

56 

601i377 

10 

36;548 

2 

16; 372 

19 

62,825 

20 

476;505 

3 

9,013 

2 

114 

Middle Atlantic: 
















New York. 

800 

537 

5,368,722 

122 

896,080 

21 

166,087 

163 

1,063,639 

183 

3446,193 

38 

77,028 

10 

19,695 

New Jersey. 

207 

131 

719,646 

37 

223,837 

9 

40,113 

37 

143,660 

41 

306,925 

6 

5,096 

1 

15 

Pennsylvania. 

686 

378 

1,818,928 

84 

542,964 

16 

53,858 

119 

420,852 

138 

752,449 

12 

32,411 

9 

16,394 

East North Central: 
















Ohio. 

310 

175 

963,841 

41 

353,948 

8 

15,517 

60 

259,817 

55 

254,322 

9 

76,385 

2 

3,852 

Indiana. 

177 

63 

190,247 

13 

33,279 

3 

9,010 

20 

67,875 

26 

79,833 

1 

250 



Illinois. 

325 

213 

2,177492 

57 

419,398 

4 

90;936 

64 

581,590 

79 

952,968 

7 

101,791 

2 

30,809 

Michigan. 

136 

81 

367,393 

16 

46,424 

3 

30,340 

23 

72,089 

36 

212,485 

2 

1,029 

1 

5,026 

Wisconsin. 

107 

57 

309,150 

12 

90,997 

5 

31,615 

18 

94,978 

20 

83,754 

2 

7,806 



West North Central: 












Minnesota. 

128 

68 

241,944 

11 

57,115 

5 

17,287 

19 

54,874 

31 

110,644 

2 

2,024 



Iowa. 

103 

51 

246,925 

14 

100', 471 

2 

33;779 

16 

44,859 

18 

55,816 

1 

12;000 



Missouri. 

159 

85 

552;540 

23 

112,373 

5 

24;618 

24 

180,056 

28 

217,179 

3 

5,094 

2 

13,220 

North Dakota. 

18 

5 

14,922 



1 

11,099 



4 

3,823 





South Dakota. 

17 

6 

24,481 

1 

8,305 

1 

13;422 



4 

2,754 





Nebraska. 

50 

18 

62,511 

5 

32,954 


7 

23,961 

6 

5,596 





Kansas. 

72 

41 

370,864 

14 

10;215 

3 

14,557 

9 

37', 307 

14 

307; 785 

1 

1,000 



South Atlantic: 











Delaware. 

23 

IS 

63,205 

5 

17,539 

1 

20 

8 

24,885 

4 

20,761 





Maryland. 

137 

77 

241,555 

26 

67,971 

2 

10,664 

24 

67,614 

23 

94,306 

2 

1,000 



District of Columbia... 

72 

36 

106,850 

8 

s; 754 


17 

42,229 

7 

43,668 

3 

6420 

1 

5,779 

Virginia. 

98 

64 

242,179 

23 

124,537 

2 

12,438 

17 

65,281 

20 

37,634 

2 

2,289 



West Virginia. 

34 

' 17 

39490 

6 

12;027 

1 

8,429 

3 

6,900 

6 

11434 

1 

1,200 



North Carolina. 

63 

38 

173,551 

i4 

96', 178 

1 

7,838 

8 

40,246 

15 

29,289 




South Carolina. 

38 

22 

109,974 

9 

95;792 

1 

4; 665 

8 

7; 648 

3 

1,569 

1 

300 



Georgia. 

81 

40 

150,687 

17 

115,258 


15 

23,615 

7 

6,925 

1 

4,889 



Florida. 

32 

10 

36,659 

3 

8,748 

1 

14,250 

2 

1,785 

4 

11,876 




East South Central: 












Kentucky. 

89 

54 

179,685 

18 

52,578 



20 

50,514 

14 

71,477 

2 

5,116 



Tennessee. 

57 

32 

110,555 

12 

49,341 

1 

326 

12 

47,661 

6 

12;406 



1 

821 

Alabama. 

36 

15 

72,553 

8 

42;321 

1 

3,750 

5 

13,982 

1 

12,500 





Mississippi. 

21 

10 

100,867 

6 

98,486 





4 

2,381 





West South Central: 













Arkansas. 

36 

17 

92,446 

7 

57,410 

1 

1,000 

6 

27,210 

3 

6,826 





Louisiana. 

61 

41 

107,497 

19 

52;966 



13 

13,976 

6 

33,167 

2 

7,138 

1 

250 

Oklahoma. 

19 

11 

38,215 

4 

15;759 

2 

5,051 

4 

17476 

1 

229 




Texas. 

94 

39 

314,965 

13 

62,292 

4 

5,583 

i(T 

111,311 

6 

135,779 





Mountain: 












Montana. 

26 

12 

31,408 

2 

16,200 

1 

6,737 

2 

2,300 

7 

6,171 





Idaho. 

11 

7 

41,540 

2 

7,179 

1 

27; 250 


4 

7,111 





Wyoming. 

8 

1 

7.486 





1 

7,486 





ColoradoT. 

72 

26 

442,179 

10 

35,218 

1 

1,297 

4 

131,695 

10 

273,769 

1 

200 



New Mexico. 

27 

8 

31,158 

1 

200 

1 

5; 500 



6 

25,458 





Arizona. 

17 

6 

29,104 

1 

4,535 




5 

24,569 





Utah. 

14 

5 

17,617 

2 

5,877 



1 

411 

2 

11.329 





Nevada. 

1 













Pacific: 
















Washington. 

71 

34 

91,859 

7 

12,320 

1 

23,990 

u 

25,311 

15 

30,238 





Oregon. 

32 

17 

55,328 

4 

13,682 

1 

1,826 

6 

19.125 

5 

19,965 

1 

730 



California. 

189 

109 

675,790 

45 

168,398 

5 

21,720 

29 

212,171 

27 

251,596 

2 

16,905 

1 

5,000 
















































































































































FINANCES OF INSTITUTIONS 


75 


RECEIPTS FROM CARE OF INMATES DURING THE YEAR, BY CLASS OF INSTITUTION, FOR DIVISIONS AND 

STATES: 1910. 


Table 66 


ALL INSTITUTIONS. 


DIVISION OR STATE. 


Total 

num¬ 

ber. 


Num¬ 
ber re¬ 
port¬ 
ing re¬ 
ceipts 
from 
care of 
in- 


Receipts 
from care of 
inmates re¬ 
ported. 


mates. 


United States. .. 
Geographic divisions: 


5,408 


2,710 


$30,320,2S9 


New England.. 

Middle Atlantic.... 
East North Central. 
West North Central 

South Atlantic.. 

East South Central. 
West South Central 

Mountain. 

Pacific. 

New England: 

Maine. 

New Hampshire... 

Vermont. 

Massachusetts.. 

Rhode Island. 

Connecticut. 


654 

376 

4,086,813 

1,693 

865 

8,348,939 1 

1,055 

573 

7,856,951 

547 

289 

3,311,906 

578 

238 

2,132,317 

203 

63 

325,919 

210 

69 

449,692 

176 

76 

1,121,450 

292 

161 

2,686,302 


56 

28 

255,252 

62 

39 

216,002 

24 

12 

114,711 

360 

210 

2,522,082 

56 

26 

176,317 

96 

61 

802,449 


institutions 

FOR CARE OF 
CHILDREN. 


HOMES FOR 
ADULTS, OR 
ADULTS AND 
CHILDREN. 


HOSPITALS AND 
SANITARIUMS. 


DISPENSARIES. 


INSTITUTIONS 
FOR BLIND AND 
DEAF. 


Num¬ 

ber 


Num¬ 

ber 


Num¬ 

ber 


Num¬ 

ber 


Num¬ 

ber 


of in- 


of in- 


of in- 


of in- 


of in- 


stitu- Amount 
tions reported, 
re¬ 


stitu¬ 

tions 

re- 


A mount 
reported. 


stitu- 

tions 

re- 


A mount 
reported. 


stitu- Amount 
tions reported, 
re- 


stitu- Amount 
tions reported, 
re- 


port- 


port- 


port- 


port- 


port- 


mg. 


mg. 


mg. 


mg. 


mg. 


626 


$1,589,704 


590 


$1,904,043 


1,357 


76 

20 ^: 

135 

57 

48 

17 

20 

17 

52 


312,437 
638,509 
274,040 
88,650 
62,060 
12,714 
13,130 
49,824 
138,340 


94 

190 

120 

55 

52 

17 

17 

6 

39 


232,215 

184 

790,584 

407 

329,850 

291 

141,184 

166 

84,185 

132 

21,612 

29 

9,339 

31 

80,515 

53 

214,559 

64 


$26,505,275 


96 


$223,616 


41 


$97,651 


3,479,169 
6,736,611 
7,212,089 
3,063,983 
1,979,091 
291,593 
427,073 
991,111 
2,324,555 


15 

26,805 

44 

148,222 

22 

27,128 

8 

15,122 

3 

2,236 


36,187 
35,013 
13,844 
2,967 
4,745 


1 150 


3 3,953 


4,895 


6 

10 

2 

38 

8 

12 


18,180 
38,216 
2,718 
164,555 
14,133 
74,635 


6 

6 

1 

55 

5 

21 


11,711 
12,255 
5,899 
130,517 
7,017 
64,816 


15 

23 

9 

101 

11 

25 


219,061 
T65,531 
106,094 
2,187,210 
151,654 
649,619 


12 

1 

2 


25,705 
513 
587 


1 6,300 


4 14,095 

1 * 3,000 

1 12,792 


Middle Atlantic: 

New York_ 

New Jersey... 
Pennsylvania.. 


800 

207 

686 


451 

103 

311 


5,092,088 

583,541 

2,673,310 


108 

32 

64 


468,848 
59,738 
109,923 


100 

20 

70 


530,678 
46,799 
213,107 


196 

47 

164 


3,937,143 

475,005 

2,324,463 


36 

2 

6 


138,996 

741 

8,485 


11 

2 

7 


16,423 

1,258 

17,332 


East North Central: 

Ohio. 

Indiana. 

Illinois. 

Michigan. 

Wisconsin. 


310 

177 

325 

136 

107 


168 

65 

208 

77 

55 


1,526,331 
1,580,247 
3,310,109 
826,793 
613,471 


55 

15 

42 

12 

11 


79,566 
30,203 
117,186 
23,007 
24,078 


37 

14 

43 

13 

13 


96,299 
25,934 
156,443 
22,197 
28,977 


66 

36 

111 

48 

30 


1,344,125 

1,524,110 

3,008,475 

775,023 

560,356 


10 


6,341 


9 

2 

1 


16,875 
3,852 
60 


3 11,130 

2 2,714 


West North Central: 

Minnesota. 

Iowa. 

ML:;uri. 

North Dakota. 

South Dakota. 

Nebraska. 

Kansas. 


128 

103 

159 

18 

17 

50 

72 


77 

58 

76 

7 

6 

27 

38 


1,117,041 
611,951 
867,227 
51,647 
115,861 
376,315 
171,864 


9 

7 

23 


13,237 

6,416 

53,022 


14 

17 

13 

1 


38,722 
25,458 
63,776 
1,079 


6 

12 


9,235 6 

6,740 4 


8,932 
3,217 


53 

34 

32 

6 

6 

14 

21 


1,064,316 

580,077 

733,716 

50,568 

115,861 

357,548 

161,897 


1 766 


6 


14,346 


2,367 



South Atlantic: 

Delaware. 

Maryland. 

District of Columbia 

Virginia. 

West Virginia. 

North Carolina. 

South Carolina. 

Georgia. 

Florida. 


23 

12 

23,776 

137 

62 

746,912 

72 

32 

246,919 

98 

36 

339,872 

34 

18 

200,752 

as 

31 

224,843 

38 

8 

*57,857 

81 

25 

221,643 

32 

14 

69,743 


2,587 

5 

1,965 

38,702 

13 

26,165 

8,914 

11 

41,254 

3,278 

7 

3,158 

3,943 



'933 

5 

1,774 

301 

2 

587 

2,321 

6 

7,637 

1,081 

3 

1,645 


4 
32 
10 
21 

14 
22 

5 

15 
9 


19,224* 
681,245 
191,853 
332,153 
196,809 
222,136 
56,969 
211,685 
67,017 


1 

1 

1 


200 

753 

1,283 


1 

2 


600 

4,145 


East South Central: 

Kentucky. 

Tennessee. 

Alabama. 

Mississippi. 


89 

57 

36 

21 


30 

23 

5 

5 


160,674 
125,967 
15,629 
23,649 


8 

6 

1 

2 


7,305 

3,965 

415 

1,029 


6 13,706 

9 6,732 

2 1,174 


16 

8 

2 

3 


139,663 

115,270 

14,040 

22,620 


West South Central: 

Arkansas. 

Louisiana. 

Oklahoma. 

Texas. 


36 

15 

55,562 

61 

18 

153,365 

19 

8 

34,577 

94 

28 

206,188 


2,376 5 

4,847 3 

3,089 3 

2,818 6 


3,568 8 

2,031 5 

1,796 3 

1,944 15 


49,618 

146,487 

29,692 

201,276 


1 150 


Mountain : 

Montana.... 

Idaho. 

Wyoming... 
Colorado 
New Mexico 

Arizona. 

Utah. 

Nevada. 


26 

11 

8 

72 

27 

17 

14 

1 


11 

4 
1 

36 

11 

5 
8 


145,414 
64,671 
10,475 
552,110 
139,793 
39,735 
169,252 


2 


10 

1 

1 

3 


6,926 1 


33,637 


4 


1,000 


1,686 . 

6,575 1 


523 


79,806 


186 


8 

4 

1 

22 

]() 

4 

4 


137,965 
64,671 
10,475 
438,667 
138,793 
38,049 
162,491 


Pacific: 

Washington 

Oregon. 

California... 


71 

32 

189 


37 

18 

106 


536,894 
368,837 
1,780,571 


8 

3 

41 


12,527 9 

4,929 6 

120,884 24 


21,458 
16,220 
176,881 


20 

7 

37 


502,909 

347,360 

1,474,286 


1 78 

2 3,875 


1 250 

2 4,645 












































































































































76 BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

RUNNING EXPENSES DURING THE YEAR, BY CLASS OF INSTITUTION, FOR DIVISIONS AND STATES: 1910 


Table 67 

DIVISION OR STATE. 

ALL INSTITUTIONS. 

INSTITUTIONS 
FOR CARE OF 
CHILDREN. 

SOCIETIES FOR 
PROTECTION 
AND CARE OF 
CHILDREN. 

HOMES FOR 
ADULTS, OR 
ADULTS AND 
CHILDREN. 

HOSPITALS AND 
SANITARIUMS. 

DISPENSARIES. 

INSTITUTIONS 
FOR BLIND AND 
DEAF. 

Total 

num¬ 

ber. 

Num¬ 

ber 

report¬ 

ing 

ex¬ 

penses. 

Expenses 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
insti¬ 
tu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Amount 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
soci¬ 
eties 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Amount 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
insti¬ 
tu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Amount 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
insti¬ 
tu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Amount 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
insti¬ 
tu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Amount 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
insti¬ 
tu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Amount 

reported. 

United States.... 

5,408 

4,260 

$94,658,836 

998 

$14,850, 746 

162 

$1,869,745 

1,299 

$19,956,359 

1,502 

$51,938,207 

189 

$1,432,783 

110 

$4,610,996 

Geographic divisions: 
















New England. 

654 

563 

11,035,527 

104 

1,158,140 

16 

226,154 

205 

2,222,307 

197 

6,932,240 

28 

100,457 

13 

396,229 

Middle Atlantic. 

1,693 

1,286 

3\ 542, 089 

270 

7,284,025 

49 

940,919 

417 

7,018,958 

446 

21,177,657 

74 

808,002 

30 

1,306,528 

East No.'tli Central.. 

1,055 

882 

18,323,469 

228 

2,642,784 

43 

217,506 

252 

4,394,973 

306 

9,826,160 

35 

277,349 

18 

964,691 

West North Central.. 

547 

433 

7,958,428 

80 

808,544 

19 

147,963 

113 

1,984,950 

189 

4,335,868 

16 

119,747 

16 

561,356 

South Atlantic. 

578 

455 

6,865,252 

136 

1,151,635 

10 

136,828 

132 

1,572, 795 

146 

3,602,732 

21 

56,399 

10 

344,863 

East South Central.. 

203 

154 

1,925,031 

47 

331,676 

4 

8,414 

52 

649,206 

39 

613,033 

5 

14,671 

7 

308,031 

West South Central.. 

210 

149 

2,304,124 

45 

359,504 

8 

20,586 

45 

512,168 

40 

975,530 

3 

23,809 

8 

412,521 

Mountain. 

176 

115 

2,458,305 

23 

244,4,56 

5 

30,501 

16 

295,524 

65 

1,676,477 

1 

200 

5 

211,147 

Pacific. 

292 

223 

5,246,611 

65 

869,982 

8 

134,874 

67 

1,305,478 

74 

2,798,498 

6 

32,149 

3 

105,630 

New England: 
















Maine. 

56 

45 

849,159 

9 

75,786 

2 

4,159 

17 

403,651 

15 

345,463 

1 

800 

1 

19,300 

New Hampshire. 

62 

52 

444,046 

14 

89,006 

1 

1,436 

14 

76,073 

23 

277,531 





Vermont... 

24 

17 

249' 337 

2 

19', 038 


5 

49;016 

10 

181 i 283 





Massachusetts. 

360 

321 

7,019', 260 

48 

566,637 

10 

171,254 

122 

1,166; 713 

111 

4,767j 670 

22 

89,560 

8 

257,426 

Rhode Island. 

56 

42 

810,362 

11 

115,837 

1 

9,306 

15 

149,668 

13 

503,498 

1 

1,053 

1 

31,000 

Connecticut. 

96 

86 

1,663,363 

20 

291,836 

2 

39,999 

32 

377,186 

25 

856,795 

4 

9,044 

3 

88,503 

Middle Atlantic: 
















New York. 

800 

647 

23,912,90S 

132 

4,851,736 

23 

618,366 

207 

4,468,538 

217 

12,871,068 

51 

286,212 

17 

816,988 

New Jersev. 

207 

170 

2,824,843 

40 

350,518 

11 

103,732 

55 

727,715 

55 

1,584,298 

7 

15,4S7 

2 

43,093 

Pennsylvania. 

686 

469 

11,804,338 

98 

2,081,771 

15 

224,821 

155 

1,822,705 

174 

6,722,291 

16 

506,303 

11 

446,447 

East North Central: 
















Ohio. 

310 

277 

5,664,559 

95 

1,172,954 

13 

34,999 

81 

1,476,330 

73 

2,684,950 

11 

73,312 

4 

222,014 

Indiana. 

177 

137 

2,771,550 

39 

337,040 

16 

32, 773 

36 

595,119 

41 

1,668,848 

3 

23,694 

2 

114,076 

Illinois. 

325 

272 

6,290,940 

58 

724,083 

5 

85,210 

82 

1,269, 774 

106 

3,721,713 

16 

172,390 

5 

317,770 

Michigan. 

136 

111 

2,005,113 

20 

184,049 

3 

33,982 

30 

431,499 

51 

1,145,510 

3 

4,118 

4 

205,955 

Wisconsin. 

107 

85 

1,591,307 

16 

224,658 

6 

30,542 

23 

622,251 

35 

605,145 

2 

3,835 

3 

104,876 

West North Central: 
















Minnesota. 

128 

113 

2,121,815 

15 

178,917 

7 

35,529 

27 

272,319 

58 

1,528,488 

4 

11,894 

2 

94,668 

Iowa. 

103 

85 

1,391,900 

15 

237,367 

2 

40,472 

24 

289,448 

41 

723,020 

1 

16,750 

2 

84,843 

Missouri. 

159 

117 

2,406,381 

26 

251,607 

5 

28,502 

30 

417,682 

43 

1,476,666 

9 

88,889 

4 

143,035 

North Dakota. 

IS 

10 

124,716 



1 

12,205 

2 

22,996 

5 

47,392 



2 

42,123 

South Dakota. 

17 

13 

376; 653 

1 

6,797 

1 

Hi 087 

2 

214;119 

7 

116,483 



2 

28; 167 

Nebraska. 

50 

36 

603,857 

7 

57,919 



13 

209; 103 

13 

248; 668 

1 

900 

2 

87,267 

Kansas. 

72 

59 

933; 106 

16 

75; 937 

3 

20,168 

15 

559; 283 

22 

195;151 

1 

1,314 

2 

Si; 253 

South Atlantic: 
















Delaware. 

23 

19 

131,808 

5 

37,425 

1 

1,429 

9 

30, 791 

3 

52,163 

1 

10,000 



Maryland. 

137 

108 

1,968,919 

34 

289,580 

2 

23,270 

28 

241,296 

35 

1,355,944 

7 

13 ;499 

2 

45,330 

District of Columbia. 

72 

53 

1,360,738 

12 

130, 763 

1 

63,911 

21 

535, 794 

13 

538, 784 

4 

7,237 

2 

84,249 

Virginia. 

98 

78 

1,217,866 

27 

174, 748 

2 

13,591 

21 

505,311 

22 

500,140 

5 

14,076 

1 

10,000 

West Virginia. 

34 

28 

412,071 

7 

43,113 

1 

8,437 

4 

61,795 

14 

250, 776 

1 

1,200 

1 

46,750 

North Carolina. 

63 

52 

597,057 

16 

162,052 

1 

7,232 

10 

44,990 

23 

311,066 

1 

325 

1 

71,392 

South Carolina. 

38 

29 

204,169 

10 

118,815 

1 

4,665 

11 

20, 797 

7 

119,892 





Georgia. 

81 

64 

744,418 

20 

183', 884 


23 

116;680 

17 

366; 650 

2 

10,062 

2 

67,142 

Florida. 

32 

24 

168,206 

. 5 

Hi 255 

1 

14,293 

5 

15; 341 

12 

107,317 


1 

20,000 

East South Central: 











Kentuckv. 

89 

67 

776,394 

19 

150,728 



25 

193,478 

18 

311,439 

3 

10,780 

2 

109,969 

Tennessee. 

57 

47 

694,749 

14 

73; 079 

2 

2,873 

16 

365;126 

10 

165;122 

2 

3,891 

3 

89,658 

Alabama. 

36 

23 

241, 797 

8 

60,260 

2 

5,541 

9 

54,812 

3 

49,900 



1 

71,284 

Mississippi. 

21 

17 

212; 091 

6 

47,609 


2 

35; 790 

8 

9i; 572 



1 

37,120 

West South Central: 











Arkansas. 

36 

27 

343,273 

7 

25,211 

1 

2,900 

7 

57,340 

10 

128,676 



2 

129,146 

Louisiana.-. 

61 

46 

799; 204 

20 

205; 194 


15 

135; 906 

8 

412; 295 

2 

20,809 

1 

2 n, 000 

Oklahoma. 

19 

15 

177; 687 

4 

17; 171 

2 

6,143 

4 

54,440 

3 

29,933 


2 

70,000 

Texas. 

94 

61 

983i 960 

14 

ini 928 

5 

Hi 543 

19 

264,482 

19 

404; 632 

1 

3,000 

3 

188,375 

Mountain: 
















Montana. 

26 

17 

333,191 

3 

59,182 

1 

5,631 

3 

48,207 

9 

172,371 



1 

47,800 

Idaho. 

11 

10 

142', 778 

2 

14', 440 

1 

7; 052 

1 

30,000 

5 

65,686 



1 

25 ; 666 

Wyoming. 

8 

3 

31,631 



1 

14;919 

2 

16; 712 




Colorado. 

72 

51 

1,319; 292 

12 

126,850 

2 

11,718 

8 

192; 173 

27 

91i; 034 

1 

200 

1 

77,317 

New Mexico. 

27 

15 

193,132 

1 

2,000 

1 

5,500 



12 

174,602 



1 

11,030 

Arizona. 

17 

7 

100,275 

2 

6,945 




5 

153', 330 




U tah. 

14 

11 

256,589 

2 

13,622 



3 

10,225 

5 

182;742 



i 

50,000 

Nevada. 

1 

1 

21,417 

1 

2i; 417 









Pacific: 
















Washington. 

71 

49 

728,269 

9 

54,806 

1 

29,811 

17 

181,702 

22 

461,950 





Oregon.”. 

32 

27 

544,402 

5 

33,151 

1 

14; 4.53 

10 

98', 716 

9 

387i669 

1 

413 

1 

10,000 

California. 

189 

147 

3,973,940 

51 

782,025 

0 

90,610 

40 

1,025,060 

43 

1,948,879 

5 

31,736 

2 

95,630 
































































































































FINANCES OF INSTITUTIONS 


77 


VALUE OF LAND, BUILDINGS, AND EQUIPMENT AT CLOSE OF THE YEAR, BY CLASS OF INSTITUTION, FOR 

DIVISIONS AND STATES: 1910. 


Table 68 

DIVISION OR STATE. 

• 

ALL INSTITUTIONS. 

INSTITUTIONS FOR 
CARE OF 
CHILDREN. 

SOCIETIES FOR 
PROTECTION AND 
CARE OF 
CHILDREN. 

HOMES FOR ADULTS, 
OR ADULTS AND 
CHILDREN. 

HOSPITALS AND 
SANITARIUMS. 

DISPENSARIES. 

INSTITUTIONS 
FOR BLIND AND 
DEAF. 

Total 

num¬ 

ber. 

Num¬ 
ber re¬ 
port¬ 
ing 
value 
of 

land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

Value 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber 
of in¬ 
stitu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Amount 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber 
of so¬ 
cieties 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Amount 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber 
of in¬ 
stitu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Amount 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber 
of in¬ 
stitu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Amount 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber 
of in¬ 
stitu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Amount 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber 
of in¬ 
stitu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Amount 

reported. 

United States. 

5,408 

3,867 

$473,516,349 

924 

$93,809,714 

67 

$3,728,568 

1,222 

$112,378,861 

1,434 

$232,841,181 

113 

$4,548,577 

107 

$26,209,448 

Geographic divisions: 
















New England. 

654 

504 

46,217,563 

94 

5,330,266 

8 

317,518 

191 

7,921,585 

186 

30,296,287 

13 

287,430 

12 

2,064,477 

Middle Atlantic. 

1,693 

1,149 

230,465,468 

252 

53,577,912 

21 

2,635;155 

385 

53,445,641 

419 

110,466,314 

45 

2,058,786 

27 

8,28i;660 

East North Central. 

1,055 

804 

74,658,277 

221 

14,375,291 

13 

7 216;580 

233 

19,525, 024 

295 

35,083,293 

25 

1,059,152 

17 

4,398j937 

West North Central. 

547 

408 

35,401,373 

75 

5,119,824 

8 

226,690 

109 

7,772,833 

193 

18,432,248 

7 

432,750 

16 

3,417,028 

South Atlantic. 

578 

409 

37,178,288 

119 

6,989,277 

8 

75,875 

125 

9,519,712 

131 

18,024,824 

14 

78,100 

12 

2,490,500 

East South Central. 

203 

142 

10,044,024 

43 

1,856,619 



50 

3,886,849 

40 

2,570,500 

2 

125,159 

7 

1,604,888 

West South Central. 

210 

141 

11,143,671 

41 

2 7 ,190, 500 

2 

22,000 

47 

2,577,200 

41 

4,602,271 

2 

17;000 

8 

1,734,700 

Mountain. 

176 

115 

10,010,451 

23 

1,472,033 

4 

102,550 

17 

2,042,031 

65 

5,495,337 

1 

60,000 

5 

838,500 

Pacific. 

292 

195 

18,397,234 

56 

2,897,992 

3 

132,200 

65 

5,687,986 

64 

7,870,098 

4 

430,200 

3 

1,378,758 

New England: 
















Maine. 

56 

40 

2,604,533 

1 

357,600 

1 

175 

15 

991,634 

15 

1,169,624 

1 

500 

1 

85,000 

New Hampshire. 

62 

47 

2,158,704 

12 

58S,841 



13 

388,000 

22 

1,181,863 





Vermont. 

24 

16 

1,039,957 

2 

92; 000 



6 

234,600 

8 

713,357 





Massachusetts. 

360 

289 

32,198; 011 

44 

2,604,845 

4 

208,093 

115 

4,601,798 

110 

22,836; 531 

9 

269,850 

7 

1,676,894 

Rhode Island. 

56 

34 

2,110,378 

9 

336,480 

1 

25,000 

14 

450,868 

8 

1,229,450 

1 

80 

1 

68,500 

Connecticut. 

96 

78 

6,105,980 

20 

1,350,500 

2 

84,250 

28 

1,254,685 

23 

3,165,462 

2 

17,000 

3 

234,083 

Middle Atlantic: 
















New York. 

800 

580 

142,081,625 

131 

23,418,229 

10 

2,462,190 

188 

39,278,986 

206 

70,454,853 

29 

1,738,602 

16 

4,728,765 

New Jersey. 

207 

147 

11,740,452 

36 

2,208,450 

4 

64,000 

52 

2,984,110 

51 

6,064,020 

3 

43,130 

1 

376,742 

Pennsylvania. 

686 

422 

76,643,391 

85 

27,951,233 

7 

108,965 

145 

11,182,545 

162 

33,947,441 

13 

277,054 

10 

3,176,153 

East North Central: 
















Ohio. 

310 

249 

28,022,242 

89 

6,571,531 

2 

28,050 

75 

6,227,177 

70 

13,714,684 

9 

300,800 

4 

1,180,000 

Indiana. 

177 

122 

8,520,946 

40 

1,959,543 

2 

36,000 

35 

2,896,690 

41 

2,741,687 

2 

180,000 

2 

707,026 

Illinois. 

325 

258 

24,395,070 

61 

3,827,244 

4 

107,530 

75 

6,475,483 

103 

12,329,849 

11 

567,052 

4 

1,087,912 

Michigan. 

136 

104 

6,219,605 

17 

1,158,413 

3 

31,000 

27 

1,228,085 

51 

2,797,267 

2 

4,300 

4 

1,000,540 

Wisconsin... 

107 

71 

7,500,414 

14 

858,560 

2 

14,000 

21 

2,697,589 

30 

3,499,806 

1 

7,000 

3 

423,459 

West North Central: 
















Minnesota. 

128 

104 

8,013,782 

14 

1,244,219 

2 

48,000 

25 

1,205,797 

59 

4,998,762 

2 

67,000 

2 

450,004 

Iowa. 

103 

84 

6,115,430 

16 

1,081,222 

2 

57,000 

25 

1,224,192 

38 

2,952,968 

1 

100,000 

2 

700,048 

Missouri. 

159 

100 

12,021,424 

24 

1,948,083 

1 

50,000 

28 

1,840,058 

40 

7,154,742 

3 

15,750 

4 

1,012,791 

North Dakota. 

18 

12 

543,040 



1 

22,390 

2 

68,500 

7 

222,150 



2 

230,000 

South Dakota... 

17 

13 

1,296;720 

1 

75,000 

1 

45;000 

2 

829,700 

7 

222 7 , 835 



2 

124;185 

Nebraska. 

50 

38 

2;70i;i96 

7 

274', 500 


13 

759;369 

15 

1,042,327 

1 

250,000 

2 

375,000 

Kansas. 

72 

57 

4 7 ,709; 781 

13 

496,800 

1 

4,300 

14 

1,845,217 

27 

1,838,464 


2 

525,000 

South Atlantic: 













Delaware. 

23 

18 

629,320 

4 

197,100 



9 

164,220 

4 

263,000 

1 

5,000 



Maryland. 

137 

93 

9,328;287 

27 

1,661,378 

2 

1,775 

25 

1,040,091 

31 

5,794 7 ,943 

5 

25,100 

3 

805,000 

District of Columbia. ... 

72 

47 

14,356,006 

11 

1,514,338 



21 

5,175,129 

9 

6,925,239 

4 

5,800 

2 

735,500 

Virginia. 

98 

70 

4,777,264 

24 

' 979; 843 

2 

20,600 

19 

2; 165; 529 

22 

i; 57i; 092 

2 

7 200 

1 

4o;ooo 

West Virginia 

34 

27 

1,366,993 

7' 

263,000 

1 

35,000 

4 

114,318 

14 

854,675 



1 

100,000 

North Carolina. 

63 

49 

2;377;336 

16 

668; 033 

1 

2; 500 

9 

181, 500 

21 

1,185; 303 

1 

40,000 

1 

300,000 

South Carolina 

38 

26 

1,219,800 

8 

640,000 

1 

1,000 

11 

218,800 

5 

260,000 



1 

100,000 

Georgia.. 

81 

56 

2;303;614 

17 

1,004,267 


22 

349;125 

14 

663,222 

1 

2,000 

2 

285;000 

Florida 

32 

23 

'819;668 

5 

61,318 

1 

15,000 

5 

111;000 

11 

507,350 


1 

125;000 

East South Central: 











Kentucky.. 

89 

61 

3,803,664 

18 

780,687 



21 

1,173,809 

19 

1,274,009 

1 

159 

2 

575,000 

Tennessee 

57 

43 

3;929,742 

12 

428;000 



17 

2;337;354 

10 

7 509 ,500 

1 

125,000 

3 

529;888 

A lahama 

36 

21 

I', 205,936 

7 

223,250 



10 

' 242', 686 

3 

490,000 


1 

250,000 

\f ississi rmi 

21 

17 

i; 104', 682 

6 

424', 682 



2 

133; 000 

8 

297', 000 



1 

250;000 

West South Central: 













A rlransas 

36 

27 

1,488,700 

7 

340,000 



7 

273,500 

11 

425,200 



2 

450,000 

Louisiana 

61 

45 

4;969;981 

18 

1,252,500 



17 

714; 990 

7 

2,485; 491 

2 

17,000 

1 

500,000 

Oklahoma 

19 

12 

7 396;102 

2 

90,000 

1 

12,000 

4 

256,152 

3 

30;250 


2 

7,700 

Texas 

94 

57 

4,288; 888 

14 

508,000 

1 

10;000 

19 

1,332; 558 

20 

l,66li330 



3 

777;000 

Mountain: 

Montana 

26 

19 

1,546,176 

3 

277,000 

1 

18,000 

4 

228,431 

10 

803,245 



1 

219,500 

T d ah o 

11 

8 

7 487;983 

1 

63; 000 

1 

73,400 

1 

93,000 

4 

213,583 



1 

45,000 


8 

3 

75;200 





1 

15,000 

2 

60,200 





J uiuiug. 

• Colorado. 

72 

50 

5,372,176 

12 

843,133 

1 

1,150 

9 

1,687; 600 

26 

2,430,293 

1 

60,000 

1 

350,000 


27 

15 

773,338 

1 

20,000 

1 

10,000 



12 

719,338 



1 

24,000 


17 

8 

414,665 

2 

58;900 


1 

12,000 

5 

343,765 




Utah 

14 

11 

1,280,913 

3 

150;000 



1 

6; 000 

6 

924;913 



1 

200,000 


1 

1 

60^00 

1 

60,000 










IN 0 V dUo ................. 

Pacific: 














71 

43 

3 183 716 

9 

484,463 

1 

40,000 

17 

1,310,225 

16 

1,349,028 





VY asiiLugtuii............. 

32 

26 

1, 973,316 

5 

207;671 

1 

83;000 

10 

7 332;195 

9 

i;300;450 



1 

50,000 

California. 

189 

126 

13;240;202 

42 

2,205; 858 

1 

9; 200 

38 

4,045,566 

39 

5,220,620 

4 

430,200 

2 

1,328,758 




















































































































































78 BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

INVESTED FUNDS AT CLOSE OF THE YEAR, BY CLASS OF INSTITUTION, FOR DIVISIONS AND STATES: 1910 


Table 69 

DIVISION OR STATE. 

ALL INSTITUTIONS. 

INSTITUTIONS FOR 
CARE OF 
CHILDREN. 

SOCIETIES FOR 
PROTECTION AND 
CARE OF 
CHILDREN. 

HOMES FOR ADULTS, 
OR ADULTS AND 
CHILDREN. 

HOSPITALS AND 
SANITARIUMS. 

DISPENSARIES. 

INSTITUTIONS 
FOR BLIND AND 
DEAF. 

Total 

num¬ 

ber. 

Num¬ 
ber re¬ 
port¬ 
ing in¬ 
vested 
funds. 

Invested 

funds 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
insti¬ 
tu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Amount 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
socie¬ 
ties 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Amount 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
insti¬ 
tu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Amount 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
insti¬ 
tu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Amount 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
insti¬ 
tu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Amount 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
insti¬ 
tu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Amount 

reported. 

United States. 

5,408 

1,646 

$174,252,695 

409 

*41,950,374 

53 

*3,013,539 

586 

*46,054,197 

519 

*74,231,634 

44 

*1,802,628 

35 

*7,200,323 

Geographic Divisions: 
















New England. 

654 

339 

43,867,759 

59 

5,900,777 

13 

1,622,360 

140 

10,903,529 

116 

22,413,205 

4 

313,920 

7 

2,713,968 

Middle Atlantic. 

1,693 

615 

87,131,468 

143 

24,376,742 

16 

1,054,738 

208 

19,851,416 

207 

36,789,805 

27 

1,053,563 

14 

4,005,204 

East North Central... 

1,055 

272 

18,154,905 

70 

4,745,985 

8 

40,606 

104 

5,866,686 

79 

7,113,031 

6 

337,929 

5 

50,668 

West North Central.. 

547 

105 

4,304,946 

25 

1,331,421 

7 

109,880 

38 

1,275,694 

31 

1,273,351 

2 

31,600 

2 

283,000 

South Atlantic. 

578 

161 

14,564,307 

58 

3,409,622 

3 

101,225 

50 

6,303,370 

42 

4,644,474 

4 

65,116 

4 

40,500 

East South Central... 

203 

44 

1,213,394 

22 

843,781 

1 

1,248 

15 

244,165 

5 

120,200 



1 

4,000 

West South Central.. 

210 

22 

1,144,340 

8 

407,149 

1 

1,000 

10 

670,740 

3 

65;451 




Mountain. 

176 

18 

'637j518 

2 

108', 500 

1 

1,000 

4 

74; 200 

10 

428;818 



1 

25,000 

Pacific. 

292 

70 

3,234; 058 

22 

826;397 

3 

81;482 

17 

864,397 

26 

1,383; 299 

1 

500 

1 

77,9S3 

New England; 
















Maine. 

56 

24 

1,505,136 

4 

367,807 



13 

426,995 

7 

710,334 





New Hampshire. 

62 

37 

1,964,456 

9 

635;633 

2 

4,046 

11 

752,511 

15 

572;266 





Vermont.". 

24 

9 

540,083 

2 

59,000 


3 

40,491 

4 

440;592 





Massachusetts. 

360 

193 

30,188;743 

28 

2,545;033 

8 

1,452,858 

82 

7,849,396 

66 

15,699;818 

3 

311,420 

6 

2,330,218 

Rhode Island. 

56 

21 

2,477,013 

5 

391,663 

1 

52,100 

9 

574,047 

6 

1,459,203 





Connecticut. 

96 

55 

7;192;328 

11 

l,90i; 641 

2 

113;356 

22 

1,260,089 

18 

3; 530; 992 

1 

2,500 

1 

383,750 

Middle Atlantic: 
















New York. 

800 

328 

43,805,809 

73 

9,181,996 

8 

688,571 

112 

11,338,825 

113 

19,376,127 

16 

796,147 

6 

2,424,143 

New Jersey. 

207 

74 

2,301,873 

21 

821,867 

3 

29,141 

23 

717,821 

24 

720,044 

3 

13,000 



Pennsylvania. 

686 

213 

41,023,786 

49 

14,372,879 

5 

337; 026 

73 

7,794;770 

70 

16,693;634 

8 

244;416 

8 

1,581,061 

East North Central: 
















Ohio. 

310 

84. 

6,728,628 

22 

2,273,510 

3 

22,902 

30 

1,817,578 

25 

2,452,644 

2 

139,411 

2 

22,583 

Indiana. 

177 

36 

1,270,306 

13 

716,641 



15 

393,090 

7 

53,650 

1 

106,925 



Elinois. 

325 

92 

6,457,062 

23 

1,087;052 

3 

12,450 

36 

2,805,836 

26 

2,458i068 

3 

9i;593 

1 

2,063 

Michigan. 

136 

32 

2,891,918 

8 

509,782 

1 

3,000 

11 

375,278 

11 

1,990,205 



1 

13,653 

Wisconsin. 

107 

28 

'806;991 

4 

159 ; 000 

1 

2; 254 

12 

474,904 

10 

158,464 



1 

12;369 

West North Central: 










Minnesota. 

128 

25 

1,259,844 

5 

505,037 

2 

35,480 

10 

380,938 

8 

338,389 





Iowa. 

103 

25 

'581i989 

7 

60;777 

1 

40,000 

11 

221,537 

5 

228;675 

1 

31,000 



Missouri. 

159 

33 

1,801i026 

9 

760;419 

2 

20,000 

10 

50i;581 

10 

460;426 

1 

'600 

1 

58,000 

North Dakota. 

18 

5 

333,746 



1 

4,400 

2 

99,463 

1 

4,883 



1 

225,000 

South Dakota. 

17 

1 

10,000 



1 

10,000 






Nebraska. 

50 

6 

72,959 

1 

784 


4 

42,175 

1 

30,000 





Kansas. 

72 

10 

245;382 

3 

4,404 



1 

30,000 

6 

210;978 





South Atlantic: 












Delaware. 

23 

9 

334,393 

3 

115,500 



4 

89,950 

2 

128,943 





Maryland. 

137 

42 

5,472,909 

18 

932;861 

2 

101,000 

11 

807;964 

8 

3,569;318 

2 

57,266 

1 

4,500 

District of Columbia.. 

72 

20 

4,267,369 

4 

322,857 



10 

3,813,964 

4 

104,548 



2 

26,000 

Virginia. 

98 

30 

2 ; 013;733 

12 

839', 567 



8 

1,043,661 

9 

125;505 

1 

5,000 


West Virginia. 

34 

4 

12i; 585 

1 

48;000 



i 

24 ;000 

2 

49;585 




North Carolina. 

63 

21 

514,856 

7 

225; 881 

1 

225 

3 

25;200 

10 

263;550 





South Carolina. 

38 

13 

797;308 

6 

552;506 



5 

189;917 

1 

52;035 

1 

2,850 



Georgia. 

81 

18 

952; 164 

7 

372', 450 



7 

296;714 

3 

273;000 


1 

10,000 

Florida. 

32 

4 

89;990 




1 

12;000 

3 

77;990 




East South Central: 













Kentucky. 

89 

27 

800,614 

12 

502,749 



11 

205,665 

3 

88,200 



1 

4,000 

Tennessee. 

57 

9 

205; 932 

5 

149;432 



3 

36;500 

1 

20;000 




Alabama. 

36 

7 

114; 498 

4 

99;250 

1 

1,248 

1 

2 ,000 

1 

12;000 





Mississippi. 

21 

1 

92; 350 

1 

92; 350 








West South Central: 














Arkansas. 

36 















Louisiana. 

61 

11 

837,172 

3 

351,399 



5 

420,322 

3 

65,451 





Oklahoma. 

19 

2 

38;484 

1 

i, 750 



1 

33; 734 






Texas. 

94 

9 

268,684 

4 

51;000 

1 

1,000 

4 

216;684 







Mountain: 













Montana. 

26 

2 

37,000 





1 

12,000 

1 

25,000 





Idaho. 

11 

2 

36;000 



1 

1,000 


1 

35;000 





Wyoming. 

8 












Colorado. 

72 

6 

424,000 

1 

33,500 



1 

60,000 

3 




1 

25,000 

New Mexico. 

27 

1 

26;000 





1 

26;000 




Arizona. 

17 

2 

2i;418 







2 

2i;418 





Utah. 

14 

5 

93;100 

1 

75,000 



2 

2,200 

2 

15;900 





Nevada. 

1 











Pacific: 















• 

Washington. 

71 

12 

256,017 

4 

21,200 

1 

400 

2 

165,975 

5 

68,442 





Oregon. 

32 

6 

416,070 

2 

242;920 

1 

50,150 

1 

10;000 

2 

113;000 





California. 

189 

52 

2,561;971 

16 

562i 277 

1 

30,932 

14 

688;422 

19 

l,20i;857 

1 

500 

1 

77,983 





























































































































































FINANCES OF INSTITUTIONS. 


79 


Table 70 gives by classes of institutions the number 
and per cent distribution of institutions reporting the 
receipt of income from public appropriations, dona¬ 
tions, and care of inmates; Table 71 gives the amounts 
reported under these heads; and Table 72 gives the 
average per institution of the receipts under these 
heads, of the amounts expended for running expenses, 
and of the value of property in land, buildings, etc. 

Certain general facts call for specific reference, these 
being (1) the large number of institutions receiving 
public aid and the proportionately still larger amount 
of aid received; (2) the comparatively small amount 
actually received for “Care of inmates” (except by 
hospitals) notwithstanding the considerable precen- 
tage of institutions reporting such income; and (3) 
the large percentage of institutions reporting the 
receipt of donations, contrasted with the small per¬ 


centage of the total income formed by this class of 
receipts. 


Table 70 

CLASS OF INSTITUTION. 

Total 
num¬ 
ber of 
insti¬ 
tutions 
re¬ 
ported. 

INSTITUTIONS REPORTING RECEIPTS 
DURING 1910, FROM— 

Public appro¬ 
priations. 

Donations. 

Care of 
inmates. 

Num¬ 

ber. 

Per 

cent 

of 

total. 

Num¬ 

ber. 

Per 

cent 

of 

total. 

Num¬ 

ber. 

Per 

cent 

of 

total. 

All institutions. 

5,408 

1,896 

35.0 

3,088 

57.1 

2,710 

50.1 

Institutions for the care of chil- 








dren. 

1,151 

459 

39.8 

801 

69.6 

626 

54.3 

Societies for care of children... 

205 

95 

46.3 

129 

62.9 



Homes for adults, or adults and 








children. 

1,435 

312 

21.7 

966 

67.3 

590 

41.1 

Hospitals. 

1,918 

876 

45.6 

1,034 

53.9 

1,357 

70.7 

Dispensaries. 

574 

61 

10.6 

120 

20.9 

96 

16.7 

Institutions for blind and 








deaf. 

125 

93 

74.4 

38 

30.4 

41 

32.8 


Table 71 

CLASS OF INSTITUTION. 

Total receipts 
reported. 

INCOME DURING 1910 FROM— 

Public appropriations. 

Donations. 

Care of inmates. 

Amount 

received. 

Per cent of 
total. 

Amount 

received. 

Per cent of 
total. 

Amount 

received. 

Per cent of 
total. 

All classes. 

Institutions for the care of children. 

Societies for care of children. 

$118,379,859 

$37,677,802 

31.8 

$19,697,598 

16.6 

$30,320,289 

25.6 

19,140,342 
2,102,892 
24,203,197 
66,213,435 
1,069,613 
5,650,380 

5,516,694 
699,413 
8,986,645 
17,906,058 
217,992 
4,351,000 

28.8 

33.3 
37.1 
27.0 

20.4 
77.0 

4,510,101 
823,060 
4,762,385 
9,061,841 
401,146 
139,065 

23.6 
39.1 

19.7 

13.7 
37.5 

2.5 

1,589,704 

&3 

Homes for adults, or adults and children. 

Hospitals. 

Dispensaries. 

Institutions for blind and deaf. 

1,904,043 
26,505,275 
223,616 
97,651 

7.9 

40.0 

20.9 

1.7 


Table 72 


AVERAGE PEE INSTITUTION REPORTING: 1910. 


CLASS OF INSTITUTION. 

Receipts from— 

Run¬ 

ning 

ex¬ 

penses. 

Value of 
property. 

Public 

appro¬ 

pria¬ 

tions. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care 

of 

in¬ 

mates. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip-. 

ment. 

Invest¬ 

ed 

funds. 

All institutions. 

Institutions for the care of 

children. 

Societies for care of children.... 
Homes for adults, or adults and 

children. 

Hospitals. 

Dispensaries. 

Institutions for blind and 
deaf. 

$19,872 

$6,314 

$11,188 

$22,220 

$122,295 

$105,500 

12,019 
7,362 

28,803 
20,441 
3,574 

46,785 

5,631 
6,380 

4,930 

8,764 

3,343 

3,660 

2,536 

3,227 

19,532 

2,329 

2,382 

14,881 

11,542 

15,363 

34,579 

7,581 

41,918 

101,526 
55,650 

91,472 

162,372 

40,253 

244,948 

102,568 
56,859 

77,567 

143,028 

40,969 

205,724 


In general, these facts seem to indicate an increased 
sense, on the part of the state, of its responsibility for 
the care of those who are sometimes called “wards of 
the state.” In the past benevolent institutions have 
been generally regarded as representing the element 
of personal or private sympathy for individual dis¬ 
tress. There appears to be arising, however, a reali¬ 
zation that even where distress does not necessarily 
go so far as pauperism, it involves detriment, if not 
danger, to the welfare of the community, and that 
dependents of all classes may properly come within 
the scope of public supervision and control. This has 
already been indicated in connection with the statis¬ 


tics for the different classes* of benevolent institutions, 
but it comes out still more clearly in these tables, 
which show that 35 per cent of the total number of 
institutions are recipients of public aid, as distin¬ 
guished from private donations; that 31.8 per cent of 
the total income of all institutions is from public 
appropriations, and that the highest average receipts 
per institution from any source are from such appro¬ 
priations. 

Attention has already been called to the large num¬ 
ber of institutions for the blind and deaf which are 
practically supported by public appropriations, but 
it is noticeable that 46.3 per cent of the societies for 
the protection and care of children, 45.6 per cent of 
the hospitals and sanitariums, and 39.8 per cent of 
the institutions for the care of children receive public 
aid. On the other hand, the donations, which ordi¬ 
narily are regarded as the # expression of the benevo¬ 
lence of the community, represented only 16.6 per 
cent of the total income of the institutions, figuring 
largely only in the returns for societies for the protec¬ 
tion and care of children, and for dispensaries. 

The lack of material for comparison in these respects 
with the situation in 1904 makes it impossible to 
speak very positively, but there appears to be suffi¬ 
cient basis for the belief that the tendency is toward 
the placing of all types of benevolent institutions 
under governmental care, and the gradual elimination 
of private support and thus of private control. 







































































80 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

INSTITUTIONS UNDER GOVERNMENTAL CARE. 


The increase since 1904 in the number of benevolent 
institutions under public, or governmental care, and 
the even greater increase in the amounts appropriated 
for their maintenance, is significant of the changing 
attitude on the part of federal, state, county, and 
municipal governments toward the dependent classes 
or “wards of the state.” 

In 1904 the total number of institutions classed as 
public was 485; in 1910 it was 636, an increase of 151, 
or 31.1 per cent. The total amount reported in 1904 
as annual subsidies from public funds was $6,089,226; 
in 1910 the total public appropriations amounted to 
$37,677,802, an increase of $31,588,576, or 518.8 per 
cent. As already stated, page 72, it seems probable 
that some items are included in the present report 
winch were not included in 1904, but with all due 
allowance for such differences of method, it is evident 
that there has been a great advance in the amount of 
aid given to benevolent institutions from public funds. 

Tables 74 to 77 show those under federal, state, 
county, and municipal care, respectively, with the 
number of inmates at the close of the year classified 
as adults and children, together with the income and 
expenditures during the year and the value of property 
at the close of the year, for all institutions under each 
form of governmental contract. 

It will be noticed that there are only two classes of 
institutions under federal care—homes for the care of 
adults, or adults and children, and hospitals and 
sanitariums. The former are confined chiefly to 


homes for soldiers, sailors, and marines; the latter 
include marine, naval, and army post hospitals, and 
certain institutions for the treatment of soldiers and 
sailors who suffer from tuberculosis. 

Institutions under state care include four classes; 
institutions for the care of children, homes for adults, 
or adults and children, hospitals and sanitariums, and 
institutions for the blind and deaf. Among the insti¬ 
tutions for the care of children are a number of sol¬ 
diers’ and sailors’ orphans’ homes, some state public 
schools, and a few general homes; the homes for adults, 
or adults and children are chiefly soldiers’ homes; and 
the hospitals and sanitariums include a number of in¬ 
stitutions for the treatment of tuberculosis, and sev¬ 
eral miners’ hospitals, especially in Pennsylvania and 
West Virginia. 

Institutions under county care are chiefly county 
homes for children and institutions for the treatment 
of tuberculosis. 

Institutions under municipal care include detention 
homes for children, municipal lodging houses, and 
municipal hospitals, the last-named class being chiefly 
for contagious diseases. 

The following table shows the number of federal, 
state, county, and municipal institutions reported, 
with the total number of inmates and the average 
number per institution reported at the close of the 
year; and the expenditures and value of property, 
with the averages under each head per institution 
reporting: 


Table 73 

CLASS OF INSTITUTION. 

Number 
of insti¬ 
tutions 
reported. 

public institutions: 1910. 

Inmates reported. 

Payments. 

Value of property. 

Total. 

Average 
per in¬ 
stitution 
reported. 

Number 
of insti¬ 
tutions 
reporting. 

Amount re¬ 
ported. 

Average 
per insti¬ 
tution 
reporting. 

Number 
of insti¬ 
tutions 
reporting. 

Amount re¬ 
ported. 

Average 
per insti¬ 
tution 
reporting. 

All public institutions. 

636 

91,457 

144 

474 

$26,017,772 

$54,890 

421 

$110,018,535 

$261,327 

Federal. 

153 

25,830 

169 

44 

5,000,163 

113,640 

26 

21,810,546 

838,867 


188 

40,936 

218 

171 

11,589.047 

67, 772 

161 

39,512,232 

245,418 

County. 

118 

8,892 

75 

107 

1,472,217 

13,759 

100 

6,048,807 

60,488 

Municipal. 

177 

15,899 

90 

152 

7,956,345 

52,344 

134 

42,646,950 

318,261 


The relatively low expenditures and high value of 
property of municipal institutions are due largely to 
the fact that the municipal hospitals for contagious 
diseases require a heavy outlay for buildings, etc., 
but as a rule cost comparatively little for running ex¬ 


penses owing to their infrequent use. The inclusion, 
among state institutions, of the majority of the insti¬ 
tutions for the blind and deaf, raises all the figures in 
that class, while the soldiers’ homes, both state and 
federal, are all large institutions. 



































INSTITUTIONS UNDER GOVERNMENTAL CARE. 81 

INSTITUTIONS UNDER FEDERAL CARE, BY CLASS OF INSTITUTION, FOR DIVISIONS AND STATES: 1910. 


Table 74 

DIVISION OR STATE. 

Total 
num¬ 
ber of 
Fed¬ 
eral 
insti¬ 
tu¬ 
tions. 


INMATES AT 

CLOSE OF YEAR. 


RECEIPTS DURING 
THE YEAR. 

PAYMENTS 
DURING THE 
YEAR. 

VALUE OF 
PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF 

THE YEAR. 

Total 
num¬ 
ber of 
inmates 
at close 
of year. 

Homes for 
adults. 

Hospitals and sanitariums. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
insti¬ 
tu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Amount 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
insti¬ 
tu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Amount 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
insti¬ 
tu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Amount 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber of 
insti¬ 
tu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ed. 

Number 
of inmates 
at close 
of year . 1 

Num¬ 
ber of 
insti¬ 
tu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ed. 

Number of patients at 
close of year. 

Total . 1 

Adults. 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

United States. 

153 

25,830 

13 

21,705 

140 

4,125 

3,943 

44 

38 

$4,794,413 

44 

$5,000,163 

26 

$21,810,546 

Geographic divisions: 















New England. 

17 

2,064 

1 

1,751 

16 

313 

313 


3 

440,646 

4 

465,923 

4 

1,269,608 

Middle Atlantic. 

23 

'708 

1 

89 

22 

619 

481 

( 3 ) 

4 

106i473 

5 

410,395 

1 

'276,332 

East North Central. 

15 

9,734 

4 

9,521 

u 

213 

213 


10 

1,746,041 

10 

1,657,380 

6 

5,613, 814 

West North Central. 

16 

3i 116 

2 

2,911 

14 

205 

198 

7 

4 

'648,562 

4 

'619,040 

4 

i;881; 882 

South Atlantic. 

32 

4,560 

3 

3,628 

29 

932 

895 

37 

8 

901,068 

12 

914,083 

7 

8,881,878 

East South Central. 

5 

1,681 

1 

1,606 

4 

75 

75 


4 

343,921 

4 

340,352 

2 

1,738,572 

West South Central. 

10 

'387 


10 

387 

387 


1 

29,282 

1 

29;282 


Mountain. 

14 

651 



14 

651 

651 


1 

104,022 

1 

104,022 

1 

500,000 

Pacific. 

21 

2,929 

1 

2,199 

20 

730 

730 


3 

464,398 

3 

459,686 

1 

1,648,460 

New England: 















Maine. 

2 

1,756 

1 

1,751 

1 

5 

5 


1 

391,838 

1 

373,261 

1 

839,608 

New Hampshire. 

2 

1 



2 

1 

1 





Vermont..*. 

1 

17 



1 

17 

17 








Massachusetts. 

9 

178 



9 

178 

178 


2 

58,808 

2 

58,808 

2 

360,000 

Rhode Island. 

3 

112 



3 

112 

112 



1 

33,854 

1 

70,000 

Connecticut. 













Middle Atlantic: 











• 




New York. 

18 

535 



18 

535 

397 

(*) 

2 

75,976 

2 

75,976 



N ew J firsey. 

2 

11 



2 

11 

11 





Pennsylvania. 

3 

162 

1 

89 

2 

73 

73 


2 

30,497 

3 

334,419 

1 

276,332 

East North Central: 













Ohio . 

3 

3,562 

1 

3,492 

2 

70 

70 


2 

634,084 

2 

602,253 

1 

1,351,552 

Indiana. 

3 

l', 764 

1 

1,753 

2 

11 

11 


2 

301,878 

2 

278;218 

1 

' 922,000 

Illinois . 

4 

2 ,513 

1 

2,428 

3 

85 

85 


3 

427; 627 

3 

407,871 

2 

1,872,906 

Michigan. 

3 

36 


3 

36 

36 


1 

24,030 

1 

24,030 


Wisconsin. 

2 

1,859 

1 

1,848 

1 

11 

11 


2 

358; 422 

2 

345,008 

2 

1,467,356 

West North Central: 














1 

3 



1 

3 

3 









1 

1 



1 

1 

1 








Missouri,,. . 

2 

74 



2 

74 

74 


1 

18,772 

1 

18,772 




1 

10 



1 

10 

10 







South Dakota. 

3 

326 

1 

316 

2 

10 

3 

7 

2 

181,971 

2 

166,042 

2 

732,700 


3 

27 



3 

27 

27 








TC S.T1SSS . 

5 

2,675 

1 

2,595 

4 

80 

80 


1 

447,819 

1 

434,226 

2 

1,149,182 

South Atlantic: 











1 

11 



1 

11 

11 








Maryland. 

7 

297 



7 

297 

269 

28 

2 

60,123 

5 

59,713 

2 

244,000 

District of Columbia. 

6 

1,730 

2 

1,445 

4 

285 

276 

9 

3 

800,145 

4 

813,570 

3 

8,421,663 


5 

2,404 

1 

2,183 

4 

221 

221 























2 

16 



2 

16 

16 


1 

10,739 

1 

10,739 

1 . 



2 

21 



2 

21 

21 








4 

37 



4 

37 

37 


1 

16,215 

1 

16,215 

1 

16,215 


5 

44 



5 

44 

44 


1 

13,846 

1 

13,846 

1 

200,000 

East South Central: 
















i 

16 



1 

16 

16 


1 

15,945 

1 

15,945 




2 

1,625 

1 

1,606 

1 

19 

19 


2 

311,230 

2 

307,661 

2 

1,738,572 


2 1 

40 



2 

40 

40 


1 

16,746 

1 

16,746 

































West South Central: 
















2 

89 



2 

89 

89 









2 

48 



2 

48 

48 


1 

29,282 

1 

29,282 




1 

5 



1 

5 

5 









5 

245 



5 

245 

245 








Mountain: 
















2 

7 



2 

7 

7 









1 




1 











3 

86 



3 

86 

86 









2 

165 



2 

165 

165 









2 

378 



2 

378 

378 


1 

104,022 

1 

104,022 

1 

500,000 


3 

15 



3 

15 

15 









i 



1 
























Pacific: 

10 

131 



10 

131 

131 


1 

18,605 

1 

18,605 




1 

5 



1 

5 

5 








California. 

10 

2,793 

1 

2,199 

9 

594 

594 


2 

445,793 

2 

441,081 

1 

1,648,460 


i All adults. * Includes those not classified by age. * Not reported. 


44153°—14-6 





























































































































































































































82 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

INSTITUTIONS UNDER STATE CARE, BY CLASS OF INSTITUTION, FOR DIVISIONS AND STATES: 1910. 


Table 75 


DIVISION OB STATE. 


United States. 

Geographic divisions: 

New England. 

Middle Atlantic. 

East North Central. 

West North Central.... 

South Atlantic. 

East South Central. 

West South Central. 

Mountain. 

Pacific. 

New England: 

Maine. 

New Hampshire. 

Vermont. 

Massachusetts. 

Rhode Island. 

Connecticut. 

Middle Atlantic: 

New York. 

New Jersey. 

Pennsylvania. 

East North Central: 

Ohio. 

Indiana. 

Illinois. 

Michigan. 

Wisconsin. 

West North Central: 

Minnesota. 

Iowa. 

Missouri. 

North Dakota. 

South Dakota. 

Nebraska. 

Kansas. 

South Atlantic: 

Delaware. 

Maryland. 

District of Columbia.... 

Virginia. 

West Virginia. 

North Carolina. 

South Carolina. 

Georgia. 

Florida. 

East South Central: 

Kentucky. 

Tennessee. 

Alabama. 

Mississippi. 

West South Central: 

Arkansas. 

Louisiana. 

Oklahoma. 

Texas. 

Mountain: 

Montana. 

Idaho. 

Wyoming. 

Colorado. 

New Mexico. 

Arizona. 

Utah. 

Nevada. 

Pacific: 

Washington. 

Oregon. 

California. 


9 

JS 


O 

E-i 


188 


17 

29 

30 
35 
25 
15 
17 
14 

6 


2 

2 

1 

7 

4 

1 


9 

6 

14 


6 

5 
7 

6 
6 


6 

6 

5 

3 

3 

7 

5 


5 

1 

33 


2 

3 

4 


3 

3 

4 

5 


4 

5 
2 

6 


3 

2 

2 

3 

2 

i 

l 


1 

2 
3 






INMATES AT CLOSE OF THE YEAR. 





RECEIPTS 
DURING THE 
YEAR. 

PAYMENTS 
DURING THE 
YEAR. 

VALUE OF 
PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF 




















THE YEAR. 

© 

CO 

£ 

'a 

- 4-3 

c3 

S3 

Institu¬ 
tions for 
care of 
children. 

Homes for care of 
adults, or adults 
and children. 


Hospitals and 
sanitariums. 

Institutions for blind 
and deaf. 

th 

3 

-♦-» 

lx 

o 

Pi 

© 


CUD 

3 

t, 
o 
Pi 
© 

u. 


.9 

-*-a 

L 

O 

Pi 

© 

l* 

















s 


| 


CO 


p 


$ 















p 


c £ 

3 

p 

Number of in- 

P 

Number of pa- 

i 

Number of in- 



*•+3 




© 

■gT) 

0 g 
.9 >> 

fS 

!| 

mates at close 


tients at close 

fS 

f| 

mates at close 

B 

% 

B 

•g 

P 

-*-> 

■g 

t —« 
o 

© w 

[9 © 

H -*-s 

O 

of the year. 

rj Q> 

o 

of the year. 

of the year. 

-*-> 

a 

•e 

o 

Pi 

if 

b 

O 

Pi 

CO 

.0 

M 

O 

a 

p 

p 

=>& 

l| 

o ° 

© 

I/j 

© © 
jp o 

If 


12 

d 

© 



J2 

S 

(-1 

Is 


CO 

d 

© 

o 

Ut 

© 

,Q 

© 

4-3 

g 

u 

© 

& 

© 

u- . 

«— 

O 

Ui 

© 

© 

(-1 

H-A 

P 

o 

I* 

0-g 
a 03 

!•! 

'c5 

- 4-3 

3 


a-3 

P 

’cS 

*3 

TJ 

rp 

I* 

■oS 

p 

'd 

'd 

:P 

a 

p 

o 

0 

a 

p 

O 

a 

a 

p 

o 

0 

e 

2 

A 

A 

EH 

<i 

o 

A 

E-* 

<: 

o 

A 

6-i 

< 

o 

A 

<1 

A 

< 

A 

-< 

40,936 

18 

4,614 

51 

19,315 

18,616 

699 

47 

6,349 

4,941 

362 

72 

10,658 

3,881 

6,571 

172 

$ 11 , 740,366 

171 

$ 11 , 589,047 

161 

$ 39 , 512,232 

3,373 

2 

247 

4 

864 

864 


8 

1,936 

1,816 

72 

3 

326 

70 

256 

16 

1 , 119,004 

16 

1 , 118,669 

11 

3 , 274,336 

8,187 

3 

878 

8 

5,088 

4,501 

587 

12 

1,609 

1,453 

156 

6 

612 

131 

478 

30 

3 , 202,954 

30 

2 , 671,215 

27 

8 , 294 , 721 

10,374 

5 

1,705 

7 

5,594 

5,594 


4 

326 

291 

35 

14 

2,749 

1,152 

1,597 

29 

2 , 516,680 

29 

2 , 814,962 

29 

9 , 787 , 740 

6,963 

4 

1,142 

11 

3,410 

3,298 

112 

6 

483 

428 

55 

14 

1,928 

718 

1,210 

34 

2 , 029,481 

33 

2 , 093,583 

32 

6 , 844,329 

2,415 
2,179 


5 

383 

383 

615 


10 

558 

541 

17 

14 

10 

1,474 

447 

824 

21 

589 , 463 

20 

620,058 
351,005 
1 , 010,754 

19 

2 , 259 , 789 
1 , 482,888 
4 , 075,560 



4 

615 


2 

324 

182 

9 

1,240 

1,569 

316 

924 

9 

347,016 
1 , 072,772 

9 

9 

4,005 

1 

308 

5 

1,017 

1,017 


3 

1,111 

230 

ii 

8 

762 

807 

16 

16 

16 

1,355 

3 

334 

4 

541 

541 


2 

2 


2 

5 

478 

158 

320 

12 

484,000 

13 

534 , 799 

13 

1 , 523,633 
1 , 969,236 

2,085 


3 

1,803 

1,803 






3 

282 

127 

155 

5 

378,996 

5 

374,002 

5 













175 

1 

64 









1 

111 

45 

66 

2 

32,300 
40,087 
21,521 

2 

32,297 
40,082 
19,961 

1 

85,000 
132,000 
20,043 
2 , 468 , 793 
568,500 

124 

1 

94 

94 


1 

30 

30 



2 

2 

2 

99 



1 

99 

99 







1 

1 

1 

2,373 

505 



1 

541 

541 


5 

1,691 

1,691 

70 

1 

141 

25 

116 

7 

866,041 

159,055 

7 

837,233 
189,096 

3 

1 

183 

1 

130 

130 


1 

'118 

( 1 2 3 4 ) 

95 

( 2 ) 

2 

1 

74 

74 

4 

4 

4 

97 



1 

97 






4,174 

1 

178 

3 

3,422 

2,922 

500 

2 

287 

236 

51 

3 

287 

91 

193 

9 

953,443 

9 

924,415 

8 

3 , 295,071 

1,497 

2,516 

2,834 



4 

1,214 

1,127 

87 

1 

123 

111 

12 

1 

160 

40 

120 

7 

597,009 

1 , 652,502 

760,100 

7 

609,870 
1 , 136,930 

817,043 


2 , 636,389 

2 , 363,261 

2 , 805,978 

2 

700 

1 

'452 

'452 

9 

1,199 

1,106 

93 

2 

165 

165 

14 

14 

12 

1 

634 

2 

1,431 

1,431 


1 

48 

48 


2 

721 

167 

554 

6 

6 

6 

1,924 

1 

361 

2 

1,091 

1,851 

1,091 






2 

472 

376 

96 

5 

485,887 
474 , 473 

5 

484,579 
702 , 451 

5 

1 , 911,576 

2 ', 989 

1 

314 

2 

lj 851 


1 

122 

87 

35 

3 

702 

376 

326 

7 

7 

7 

2 , 492 ', 472 

1,992 

1 

197 

1 

1,221 

1,221 


1 

52 

52 


3 

522 

66 

456 

6 

477,878 

6 

488,407 

6 

1 , 796,130 

635 

1 

199 





1 

104 

104 


4 

332 

167 

165 

5 

318,342 

378,879 
467,022 

5 

322,482 

391,871 

5 

781,584 

1 , 357,018 
1 , 738,896 

1,209 

1 

232 

1 

528 

528 


2 

80 

80 


2 

369 

369 

5 

4 

4 

2,061 

1 

585 

1 

850 

850 


2 

265 

265 


2 

361 

198 

163 

6 

6 

517 j 827 

6 

1,031 



2 

545 

544 

i 

1 

75 

71 

4 

2 

411 

186 

225 

5 

463,176 

5 

465,976 

5 

1 , 218 , 434 
456 , 896 
224,185 
818,500 

'143 



1 

40 

40 



2 

103 

44 

59 

3 

71, 845 
128,046 
259,812 

3 

59 , 867 
102,273 

2 

345 



1 

232 

232 






2 

113 

53 

60 

3 

3 

3 

996 

1 

127 

3 

559 

536 

23 

1 

63 

12 

51 

2 

247 

117 

130 

7 

7 

295 ', 037 

7 

1,178 

1 

198 

2 

656 

568 

88 





2 

324 

120 

204 

5 

260,701 

5 

260,732 

5 

1 , 030,400 











581 



1 

103 

103 


1 

210 

196 

14 

3 

268 

106 

162 

4 

136,104 

4 

148,453 

4 

1 , 111,289 

94 




1 

94 

91 

3 




164 



4 1 




1 

90 

90 


1 

74 


74 

2 

37,000 
132,737 
143,963 
14,000 
98,500 
27,159 

2 

95,500 
104,726 
138,052 
14,000 
92,142 
27,185 

2 

115,000 
210,000 
350,000 
15,000 
295,000 
163,500 

315 






3 

123 

123 


1 

192 

106 

86 

4 

3 

4 

549 



1 

145 

145 


1 

37 

37 


1 

367 

171 

196 

3 

3 

2 

203 




1 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

1 

203 

( 2 ) 

64 

( 2 ) 

203 

1 

1 

1 

2 

380 



1 

113 

113 



2 

267 

3 

3 

129 



1 

22 

22 


2 

4 

4 


1 

103 

103 

4 

4 

4 

698 



1 

237 

237 






2 

461 

171 

290 





593 



1 

120 

120 






2 

473 

145 

328 

3 

108,166 
87,096 
151,754 

279,835 
292,134 
80,000 
420,803 

114,278 
56,000 
14,919 
217,044 
12 , 759 

3 

114,237 
86,410 
150,358 

227,217 
299,984 
70,000 
413,553 

128,014 
94,000 
14,919 
209,819 
14,130 

3 

602,888 
310,000 
570,000 

560,000 
1 , 980,860 
7,700 
1 , 527,000 

396,500 
138,000 
15,000 
687,133 
27,000 

384 



1 

78 

78 






3 

306 

306 

2 

2 

2 

504 



1 

180 

180 


2 

324 

182 

14 

2 

( 2 ) 

381 

( 2 ) 

173 

( 2 ) 

208 

4 

4 

4 

518 



1 

80 

80 


1 

57 

57 

2 

4 

4 

4 

1,384 

283 



2 

188 

188 


2 

1,054 

173 

11 

1 

142 

102 

40 

4 

4 

4 







2 

283 

71 

212 

2 

2 

2 

1,820 

174 

1 

308 

2 

749 

749 






3 

763 

416 

347 

6 

6 

6 

3 

1 

1 

91 

91 






1 

83 

20 

63 

3 

3 

227 


1 

177 

177 






1 

50 

23 

27 

2 

2 

2 

53 



1 

53 

53 


4 1 




1 

1 

1 

3 

653 

1 

243 

1 

220 

220 





1 

190 

72 

118 

3 

3 

36 




1 

2 


2 

1 

34 

11 

23 

1 

2 

2 












121 











1 

121 

32 

89 

1 

50,000 

19,000 

1 

50,000 

23,917 

1 

1 

200,000 

60,000 

91 

1 

91 









1 

i 

690 


1 

690 

690 












160 



1 

134 

134 






1 

26 


26 

129 

2 

39,190 
339,806 

2 

40,883 

333,119 

9 , 

100,000 
1 , 869,236 

1,235 



1 

979 

979 






2 

256 

127 

3 

3 

2 














1 Includes those not classified by age. 

2 Not reported. 

3 Does not include Lee Camp Soldiers’ Home, Richmond, which, though receiving state appropriation, is registered as a private organization 

4 Not opened until 1911. 


















































































































































































































INSTITUTIONS UNDER GOVERNMENTAL CARE. 83 

INSTITUTIONS UNDER COUNTY CARE, BY CLASS OF INSTITUTION, FOR DIVISIONS AND STATES: 1910. 


Table 76 

DIVISION OR STATE. 

Total 

num¬ 

ber 

of 

Coun¬ 

ty 

in¬ 

stitu¬ 

tions. 



inmates at close of the 

YEAR. 




RECEIPTS DURING 
THE year. 

PAYMENTS 
DURING THE 
YEAR. 

VALUE OF 
PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF 

THE YEAR. 

Total 
number 
of in¬ 
mates 
atclose 
of the 
year. 

Institutions 
for care of 
children. 

Homes for adults, or 
adults and children. 

Hospitals and sanitariums. 

Num¬ 
ber 
of in¬ 
stitu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Amount 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber 
of in¬ 
stitu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Amount 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber 
of in¬ 
stitu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Amount 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber 
of in¬ 
stitu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ed. 

Num¬ 
ber 
of in¬ 
mates 
at 

close 
of the 
year. 

Num¬ 
ber 
of in¬ 
stitu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ed. 

Number of inmates 
at close of the year. 

Num¬ 
ber 
of in¬ 
stitu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ed. 

Number of patients 
at close of the year. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 1 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

United States. 

118 

8,892 

92 

7,518 

2 

87 

87 


24 

1,287 

1,109 

133 

109 

$1,305,780 

107 

$1,472,217 

100 

$6,048,807 

Geographic divisions: 



















New England. 

7 

619 

7 

619 









6 

116,088 

6 

116,821 

6 

350,000 

Middle Atlantic. 

14 

1,121 

5 

194 

1 

68 

68 


8 

859 

769 

90 

13 

375^ 401 

13 

534j651 

11 

1,573,113 

East North Central. 

73 

6,492 

70 

6,431 





3 

61 

41 

10 

70 

607', 336 

69 

622' 940 

66 

3,549. 694 

West North Central. 

6 

248 

4 

173 





2 

75 

72 

3 

6 

49, 523 

5 

40, 768 

5 

86,000 

South Atlantic. 

2 

19 

1 


1 

19 

19 






2 

5,463 

2 

5,966 

2 

19,000 

East South Central. 

5 

185 

1 

26 





4 

159 

139 

20 

4 

69,824 

4 

65,294 

4 

267, 000 

West South Central. 

1 

24 

1 

24 









1 

3,450 

1 

3,450 

1 

25,000 

Mountain. 

4 

46 







4 

46 

11 


3 

39,205 

3 

39,205 

3 

73,000 

Pacific. 

6 

138 

3 

51 





3 

87 

77 

10 

4 

39; 490 

4 

43,122 

2 

106,000 

New England: 



















Connecticut. 

7 

619 

7 

619 









6 

116,088 

6 

116,821 

6 

350,000 

Middle Atlantic: 
















New York. 

6 

783 

1 

23 

1 

68 

68 


4 

692 

667 

25 

6 

190.891 

6 

203,345 

5 

868,358 

New Jersey. 

5 

194 

1 

27 





4 

167 

102 

65 

4 

160,490 

4 

307,289 

3 

556; 855 

Pennsylvania.. 

3 

144 

3 

144 









3 

24; 020 

3 

24; 017 

3 

147,900 

East North Central: 

















Ohio. 

52 

2,406 

50 

2,355 





2 

51 

41 

10 

51 

478,104 

50 

487.444 

49 

3.106,587 

Indiana. . 

17 

419 

17 

' 419 









16 

48,632 

16 

48,576 

13 

173', 107 

Illinois... 

i 

3,509 

1 

3,509 









1 

37,200 

1 

41^512 

1 

200;000 


i 

10 






1 

10 

( 2 ) 

(*) 




1 

10.000 


2 

148 

2 

148 







2 

43,400 

2 

45,408 

2 

60,000 

West North Central: 



















1 

24 

1 

24 









1 

15,000 

1 

15,000 

1 

28,000 


3 

83 

1 

8 





2 

75 

72 

3 

3 

15!843 

2 

7,137 

3 

50', 000 


1 

4 

1 

4 









1 

13,680 

1 

13,680 




1 

137 

1 

137 









1 

5,000 

1 

4,951 

i 

8,000 

South Atlantic: 

















1 

19 



1 

19 

19 






1 

3,663 

1 

3,666 

1 

11,500 


1 


1 

( J ) 









1 

1,800 

1 

2 ,300 

1 

7,500 

East South Central: 


















4 

98 

1 

26 





3 

72 

64 

8 

3 

42,224 

3 

37,694 

3 

117,000 


i 

87 







1 

87 

75 

12 

1 

27,600 

1 

27,600 

1 

150,000 

West South Central: 




















1 

24 

1 

24 









1 

3,450 

1 

3,450 

1 

25,000 

Mountain: 

i 
















i 

4 







1 

4 

4 


1 

7,607 

1 

7,607 

1 

5,000 


3 

42 







3 

42 

7 

( 2 ) 

2 

31.598 

2 

31,598 

2 

68,000 

Pacific: 




















1 

9 

1 

0 









1 

4,522 

1 

4,522 




1 

87 







1 

87 

77 

10 

1 

19,040 

1 

23,000 

1 

100,000 

California. 

4 

42 

2 

42 





2 

( J ) 

(*) 

(’) 

2 

15,928 

2 

15,600 

1 

6,000 


i Includes those not classified by age. 1 Not reported. 

































































































































































84 BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

INSTITUTIONS UNDER MUNICIPAL CARE, BY CLASS OF INSTITUTION, FOR DIVISIONS AND STATES: 1910. 


Table 77 

DIVISION OE STATE. 

Total 

num¬ 

ber 

of 

Mu¬ 

nici¬ 

pal 

insti¬ 

tu¬ 

tions. 


INMATES AT CLOSE OF 

THE YEAR. 




RECEIPTS 
DURING THE 
YEAR. 

PAYMENTS 
DURING THE 
YEAR. 

VALUE OF 
PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF 

THE YEAR. 

Total 
number 
of in¬ 
mates 
at close 
of the 
year. 

Institutions 
for care of 
children. 

Homes for adults or adults 
and children. 

Hospitals and sanitariums. 

Num¬ 
ber 
of in¬ 
stitu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Amount 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber 
of in¬ 
stitu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Amount 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber 
of in¬ 
stitu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ing. 

Amount 

reported. 

Num¬ 
ber 
of in¬ 
stitu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ed. 

Num¬ 
ber 
of in¬ 
mates 
at close 
of the 
year. 

Num¬ 
ber 
of in¬ 
stitu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ed. 

Number of inmates 
at close of the year. 

Num¬ 
ber 
of in¬ 
stitu¬ 
tions 
re¬ 
port¬ 
ed. 

Number of patients 
at close of the year. 

Total. 

Adults. 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

Total. 1 

Adults. 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

United States. 

177 

15,899 

5 

445 

8 

1,222 

1,199 

23 

164 

14,232 

10,090 

3,350 

150 

$7,563,485 

152 

$7,956,345 

134 

$42,646,950 

Geographic divisions: 



















New England. 

34 

1,733 



3 

93 

89 

4 

31 

1,640 

1,156 

459 

29 

1,308,889 

30 

1,280, 790 

26 

2,211,897 

Middle Atlantic. 

40 

8', 385 

1 

39 

1 

691 

672 

19 

38 

7,655 

5; 175 

2,480 

35 

3;499; 113 

38 

4,184,198 

37 

26,883i 862 

East North Central... 

35 

2,095 



1 

349 

349 


34 

1,746 

1,503 

194 

31 

1,035, 757 

30 

975,516 

26 

5,564,561 

West North Central_ 

18 

1 , 647 







18 

1,647 

1,008 

150 

15 

' 814^ 633 

14 

591,529 

14 

L 647,839 

South Atlantic. 

15 

'663 

3 

406 

3 

89 

89 


9 

'168 

143 

16 

15 

242', 055 

16 

235', 144 

12 

940; 872 

East South Central... 

9 

393 







9 

393 

349 

21 

8 

189'054 

8 

195,598 

8 

557,500 

W est South Central... 

8 

237 







8 

237 

38 

2 

5 

83H88 

5 

76,813 

5 

183,600 

Mountain. 

3 

259 

1 

(*) 





2 

259 

250 

9 

3 

119^ 708 

3 

116,754 

3 

533,222 

Pacific. 

15 

487 






15 

487 

468 

19 

9 

27U088 

8 

300,003 

3 

1,123; 597 

New England: 



















Maine. 

1 

1 







1 

1 

1 








New Hampshire. 

2 

30 







2 

30 

24 

6 

1 

24,083 

2 

26,871 

2 

133,300 

Vermont. 
















Massachusetts. 

26 

1,572 



3 

93 

89 

4 

23 

1,479 

1,065 

389 

23 

1,197,919 

23 

1,190,599 

21 

1,626,597 

Rhode Island. 

2 

97 







2 

97 

39 

58 

2 

34,194 

2 

34,194 

1 

390,000 

Connecticut. 

3 

33 







3 

33 

27 

6 

3 

52; 693 

3 

29; 126 

2 

62,000 

Middle Atlantic. 
















New York. 

28 

7,490 

1 

39 

1 

691 

672 

19 

26 

6,760 

4,755 

2,005 

23 

2,930,745 

26 

3,625,239 

25 

23,470,799 

New Jersey. 

8 

547 







8 

547 

366 

181 

8 

305,213 

8 

318,377 

8 

1 ,669,428 

Pennsylvania. 

4 

348 







4 

348 

54 

294 

4 

263,155 

4 

240;582 

4 

L743,635 

East North Central: 


















Ohio. . 

8 

1,207 







8 

1,207 

1,034 

124 

7 

700,451 

7 

647,030 

6 

3,402,088 

Indiana. 

7 

'275 







7 

'275 

'242 

33 

6 

114' 747 

5 

104,081 

6 

'393;405 

Illinois.. 

6 

431 



1 

349 

349 


5 

82 

79 

3 

6 

91,003 

6 

84'300 

5 

212;832 

Michigan. 

8 

144 







8 

144 

131 

13 

8 

103’636 

8 

105'816 

7 

126; 236 

W isconsin. 

6 

38 







6 

38 

17 

21 

4 

25,920 

4 

34,289 

2 

1,430,000 

West North Central: 

















Minnesota. 

9 

705 







9 

705 

599 

106 

8 

351,809 

8 

385,608 

8 

1,203,000 

Iowa. 

4 

(«) 







4 

(*) 

( J ) 

( 3 ) 

3 

2 ,776 

3 

2,776 

2 

14;600 

Missouri. 

4 

'906 







4 

906 

^ 409 

44 

4 

460,048 

3 

203,145 

4 

3,430,239 

North Dakota. 
















South Dakota. 



















Nebraska. 

1 

36 







1 

36 

(*) 

( s ) 







Kansas. 

















South Atlantic: 



















Delaware. 



















Maryland. 



















District ol Columbia.. 

3 

226 

2 

185 

1 

41 

41 






4 

88,625 

4 

86,943 

3 

634,550 

Virginia. 

1 

22 







1 

22 

22 


1 

7,539 

1 

6 979 

1 

10 000 

West Virginia. 

1 

16 







1 

16 

14 

2 

1 

14,447 

1 

8,911 

1 

15^000 

North Carolina. 

1 

2 







1 

2 

1 

1 

1 

2,419 

1 

2.424 

1 

20,000 

South Carolina. 

3 

269 

1 

221 

2 

48 

48 






3 

29,455 

3 

29,445 

1 

10 000 

Georgia. 

5 

117 







5 

117 

95 

13 

4 

87,086 

5 

91 878 

4 

148 222 

Florida. 

1 

11 







1 

11 

11 


1 

12,484 

1 

8,569 

1 

103,100 

l 

East South Central: 














Kentucky. 

5 

258 







5 

258 

225 

10 

5 

124,920 

5 

132,300 

5 

387,000 

Tennessee. 

3 

135 







3 

135 

124 

11 

3 

64,134 

3 

63;298 

3 

170,500 

Alabama. 

1 

(*) 







1 

(*) 

( J ) 

(*) 





Mississippi. 















West South Central: 



















Arkansas. 

2 

( s ) 







2 

(*) 

( s ) 

(») 

2 

6,800 

2 

6,800 

2 

11,700 

Louisiana. 












Oklahoma. 
















I 



Texas. 

6 

237 







6 

237 

38 

2 

3 

76,388 

3 

70,013 

3 

171,900 

Mountain: 
















Montana. 



















Idaho. 



















Wyoming. 



















Colorado. 

2 

258 

1 

( 3 ) 





1 

258 

249 

9 

2 

113,923 

2 

113,903 

2 

522,000 

New Mexico. 
















Arizona. 



















Utah. 

1 

1 







1 

1 

1 


i 

5,785 

1 

2,851 

i 

11,222 

Nevada. 















Pacific: 



















Washington. 

3 

53 







3 

53 

44 

Q 

3 

43,497 

3 

43,497 



Oregon “. 

















California. 

12 

434 







12 

434 

424 

10 

6 

227,591 

5 

256,506 

3 

1,123,597 


1 Includes those not classified by age. 


1 Not reported. 






















































































































































































GENERAL TABLES 






Institution number. 


86 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table I.— INSTITUTIONS FOR 


l 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 


1 

2 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 

9 

10 

11 

12 








S3 

CHILDREN RECEIVED 

FOR 

FIRST 





T3 


© 

**-• 

o 



TIME IN 

1910. 




• 



"© 

8 

bo 

o3 

4-> 

© 

co 

O 

'o 

-t^> 



' 

Through— 

NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of children received. 


S 

a3 

CO 





© 

W> 

»H . 

O 





*6 

© 

'O 

3 

a 

•s 

•a 

o 

O 

© 

O 

S-t 

© 

© 

ft 

a 



© 

’© 

s 

o 

^ c 

O 

0 43 

“•5 

•<—i 

c5 © 

ft® 

CO 

© 

•rH O 

.2 

*© 

3 

© 

ttf) 

03 





© 

tO 

© 





03 



u. 




H 

c« 

© 

£ 

s 

3 

2 

*c3 

03 

O 

© 

a 

© 

2 

3 

o g 

£.9 

TP w 
A 

-4 3 
© .2 

© 

5 





o 



E-i 

a 


P4 

o 

o 


o 

ALABAMA. 















Birmingham: 




No. 



40 

21 

19 




36 


St. Edward’s Atheneum Orphan Home. 

Sisters of Charity. 

Orphan and dependent chil¬ 
dren. 

1903 


5 

2 


2 


8131 Berney Ave. (East Take P. 0.). 














Evergreen: 




No. 




6 





12 


Louise Short Baptist Home.. 

Private corporation (Bap¬ 
tist). 

Dependent children from 2 
to 14. 

1.893 


11 

14 

8 

2 

















Mobile: 



No. 









15 


Church Home for Orphans.. 

Protestant Episcopal Dio¬ 
cese of Alabama. 

Orphan and destitute chil¬ 
dren. 

1864 

5 

(*) 

IS 

2 

16 

3 




204 South Warren St. 

1838 

No. 








25 


Industrial School for Catholic Orphan 
Boys. 

Brothers of the Sacred Heart. 



1 

29 

29 



4 













3 Lafayette St. 

Protestant Orphan Asylum.. 


Indigent orphan children.... 

Orphan and neglected girls.. 

1836 

No. 


5 

15 

6 

9 




15 


859 Daupliin Way.” 

St. Mary’s Female Orphan Asylum_ 

357 Conti St. 


1838 

No. 


2 

32 


32 




29 

3 











Summerfield: 




No. 











Alabama Methodist Orphanage, , 

Methodist E piscopalChurch, 
South. 

Needv children. 

1881 


10 

34 

15 

19 





34 










Talladega: 




No. 









12 


Presbyterian Orphans’ Home. 

Presbyterian Synod of Ala¬ 
bama. 

Orphan children. 

1868 


8 

16 

8 

8 


4 





0 












ARIZONA. 















Tucson: 




No. 











Methodist Industrial School... 

WOman’s Home Missionary 
Society, M. E. Church. 

Mexican girls. 

1906 


5 

24 


24 




24 


1200 East Seventh St. 


No. 








59 


St. Joseph’s Orphanage.. 


Orphan and abandoned 
cnildren. 

1905 



59 

29 

30 















ARKANSAS. 















Batesville: 




No. 












Masonic Grand Lodge of 
Arkansas. 

Masons’ destitute orphan 
children. 

1905 


9 

44 

20 

24 




44 










Fort Smith: 















Orphans’ Home. 

Private corporation. 

Orphan and destitute chil- 

1900 

No. 


4 

(>) 

0) 

0) 

( l ) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

* 615 North Nineteenth St. 


dren. 





Helena: 















Ophelia Polk Moore Memorial Home... 


Orphan and dependent chil¬ 
dren. 

1892 

No. 


1 

15 

8 

7 

2 

13 











0) 


St. John’s Orphan Asylum. 

ProtestantEpiscopalChurch. 

Orphan children. 

(') 

( l ) 

0) 

(>) 

0) 

(») 

(») 

0) 

(>) 

0) 

( l ) 

Levy: 


St. Joseph’s Orphanage. 

Sisters of St. Benedict. 

Orphan and neglected chil¬ 
dren. 

1909 

No. 


4 

79 

42 

37 

4 

20 


55 


Little Rock: 













Arkansas Methodist Orphanage. 

Methodist Episcopal Church, 
South. 

Orphan children under 14... 

1899 

No. 


5 

10 

4 

6 




10 


Sixteenth and Elm'Sts. 










Children’s Home. 

Private corporation. 

Orphan children. 

1886 

(>) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

( l ) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

416 East Fifth St. 



Monticello: 















Arkansas Baptist Orphans’ Home. 

Baptist churches of Arkansas 

Orphan children under 13... 

1896 

No. 


4 

30 

12 

18 




30 


Texarkana: 








Baptist Orphans’ Home. 

Landmark Baptist Church.. 

Orphan children. 

1907 

No. 


2 

1 

1 





1 


CALIFORNIA. 










Alameda: 















California Girls’ Training Home. 

Private organization. 

Delinquent girls from 9 to 16. 

1893 

No. 


4 

18 


18 

18 





520 Lincoln Ave. 









Anaheim: 















St. Catharine’s Orphan Asylum. 

Sisters of St. Dominie. 

Orphan and abandoned 
boys, and boarders. 

1894 

No. 


1 

29 

29 


7 


1 

21 


215 Palm St. 









Bakersfield: 














Kern County Children’s Shelter. 

Private corporation. 

Orphan and abandoned 
cnildren. 

1906 

Yes. 


3 

25 

10 

15 





25 

920 Twentieth St. 








Chino: 















California Junior Republic. 

California George Junior 
Republic Association. 

Delinquent and wayward 
boys. 

1907 

(!) 

3 

5 

40 

40 


10 



30 









Fresno: 













Fresno County Orphanage. 

Private association. 

Orphan and abandoned 
cnildren. 

1895 

Yes. 


6 

52 

22 

30 

13 



33 

6 

Venture Ave. * 






Gardena: 















McKinley Industrial Home. 

Private corporation. 

Orphan and homeless boys.. 

1898 

No. 

4 

10 

22 

22 





22 


Gilroy: 








Odd Fellows’ Orphans’ Home. 

Rebekah Assembly, I. O. 
O. F. of California. 

Odd Fellows’ and Rebek- 

1897 

No. 


7 

16 

9 

7 




16 



ahs’ orphan children. 








Grass Valley: 














Grass Valley Orphan Asylum s . 

Sisters of Mercy. 

Orphan and abandoned 
cnildren. 

1863 

Yes. 


6 

11 

4 

7 

1 



10 


Church St. 








Los Angeles: 















Frances M. De Pauw Industrial School. 

Woman’s Home Missionary 

Spanish and Mexican girls... 

1900 

No. 


5 

30 


30 

3 

7 


18 

2 

4840 Sunset Boulevard. 

Society, M. E. Church. 













Home of the Guardian Angel. 

Sisters of Mercy. 

Orphan and abandoned 
cnildren, and boarders. 

1895 

Yes. 


8 

94 

50 

44 

18 

0) 

0) 

( l ) 

0) 

West Washington St. (It. D. 7, Box 




148). 















Jewish Orphans’ Home. 

Private corporation. 

Orphan and destitute Jew¬ 
ish children. 

1908 

No. 


7 

40 

17 

23 




40 


2033 East Fourth St. 








Los Angeles Orphan Asylum. 

Sisters of Charity. 

Orphan girls from 2 to 14_ 

1869 

No. 


16 

141 


141 




140 

1 

Stephenson’and Boyle Aves. 








1 Not reported. * Boarders. * Includes report of St. Patrick’s Boys’ Orphan Asylum and St. Vincent’s Girls’ Orphan Asylum. 













































































































GENERAL TABLES 


87 


THE CARE OF CHILDREN: 1910. 


CHILDREN IN THE 
CLOSE OF 

INSTITUTION 

YEAR. 

AT 

CHILDREN 
OUTSIDE BUT 
UNDER 
SUPERVISION. 

CHILDREN 
PLACED IN 
FAMILIES 
DURING 
YEAR. 

CHILDREN 
DISCHARGED 
DURING YEAR. 

RECEIPTS 

DURING YEAR. 


PAYMENTS DURING 
YEAR. 

VALUE OF 
PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Total. 

© 

'cS 

s 

© 

a 

© 

ft 

Dependent. 

vi 

Jh 

to 

lx 

o 

Vi 

o 

42 

1 

lx 

O 

ts 

•*-> 

P 

© 

S 

.a 

■© 

A 

Total. 

Derived from— 

■o 

a . 

tL 

Vi P 

p£ 

03 ^ 

ft o 

U. *- 

O 

6 

a 

© 

$3 

> 

p 

t-H 

<3 

a 

o 

*55 

o 

Eh 

© 

a 

© 

•3 

a 

© 

ft 

73 

o 

ft 

© 

73 

a 

© 

73 

a 

© 

ft 

73 

o 

EH 

© 

73 

a 

© 

73 

a 

© 

ft 

Ap- 

pro- 

pria- 

tions. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources 

Total. 

For 

run¬ 

ning 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total 

(includ« 

ing 

invested 

funds). 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

99 

48 

51 

75 


24 









33 

11 

22 

$5,160 

$2,760 

$800 


$1,600 

$5,000 

$5,000 




1 

91 

45 

46 

48 


43 



2 


2 

10 

4 

6 

1 

1 


16,015 

16,015 


17,501 

16,326 

$1,175 

$40,000 

$30,000 

2 

44 

5 

39 

44 





0) 

( l ) 

0) 




17 

2 

15 

4,999 


1,572 


3,427 

4,547 

4,547 

52,750 

10,250 

3 

89 

89 


89 





47 

47 

3 

3 


21 

21 


6,500 


3,000 


3,500 

15,000 

7,000 

8,000 

75,000 

75,000 

4 

45 

25 

20 

45 








5 

2 

3 

3 

3 


4,000 


300 


3,700 

3,950 

3,500 

450 

26,000 

16,000 

5 

76 


76 

63 

3 

10 









26 


26 

7,229 


812 

$415 

6,002 

7,525 

5,844 

1,681 

12,000 

12,000 

6 

89 

34 

55 

89 





3 

2 

1 

35 

17 

18 




8,954 


7,528 


1,426 

13,623 

7,523 

6,100 

63,750 

27,000 

7 

70 

25 

45 

70 








9 

8 

1 

5 

3 

2 

13,520 


12,294 


1,226 

13,520 

10,520 

3,000 

53,000 

53,000 

8 

41 


41 

26 


2 15 












4,535 


4,535 



17,987 

3,816 

14,171 

22,200 

22,200 

1 

(*) 

0) 

0) 

( l ) 











0) 

0) 

(>) 

0) 


0) 

« 

(i) 

(!) 

( x ) 

0) 

2 

41 

17 

24 

41 








• 



3 

3 

19,297 


19,297 

5,640 

2,640 

3,000 

90,000 

90,000 

1 

25 

(i) 

(1) 

( l ) 

(■) 

0) 

0) 

( i > 

C 1 ) 

0) 

0) 

16 

9 

7 

0) 

0) 

(i) 

2,350 

1,800 

350 

200 


2,500 

2,500 

5,000 

5,000 

2 

19 

10 

9 

3 

16 




13 

7 

6 

800 

500 


300 

800 

800 


5,000 

5,000 

3 

0) 

0) 

( i ) 

(>) 

(*) 

0) 

( l ) 

o) 

(■) 

(») 

0) 

( i ) 

C 1 ) 

(■) 

0) 

(*) 

0) 

0) 

o) 

(>) 

( i ) 

C) 

( i ) 

« 

(>) 

C 1 ) 

(*) 

4 

79 

42 

37 

20 


59 












4,939 


2,763 

2,176 


5,27)i 

5,271 


150,000 

150,000 

5 

31 

10 

21 

31 








9 

4 

5 

2 


2 

23,000 


23,000 


23,000 

3,000 

20,000 

35,000 

35,000 

6 

o 

0) 

0) 

0) 

(») 

0) 

( l ) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

(■) 

0) 

(*) 

0) 

( i ) 

0) 

( i ) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

( l ) 

0) 

(>) 

e> 

0) 

0) 

7 

28 

12 

16 

28 











•J 


2 

8,000 


8,000 



10,000 

9,000 

1,000 

35,000 

35,000 

8 

20 

5 

15 

20 














3,500 


3,500 



3,200 

2,000 

1,200 

20,000 

20,000 

9 

24 


24 

19 




5 

0) 


0) 

o) 


0) 




4,012 

1,445 

1,614 

580 

373 

3,974 

3,731 

243 

11,700 

8,000 

1 

160 

160 


123 


2 30 


7 



29 

29 


12,445 

8,756 

308 

2,590 

791 

12,410 

12,410 


35,000 

35,000 

2 

46 

24 

22 

27 


19 






19 

10 

9 

29 

15 

14 

3,100 

3,000 

100 


4,800 

4,800 


12,000 

12,000 

3 

60 

60 


8 


5 


47 







10 

10 


22,305 

1,431 

18,400 

2,474 


22,305 

12,302 

10,003 

17,358 

17,358 

4 

43 

25 

18 

26 


17 









59 

27 

32 

6,716 

5,630 

155 

931 


7,109 

7,109 

40,000 

40,000 

5 

105 

105 


59 


46 









22 

22 


11,849 

1,840 

1,082 

8,234 

693 

16,192 

12,192 

4,000 

80,000 

80,000 

6 

55 

33 

22 

55 











2 


2 

12,837 

1,592 

5,008 

900 

5,337 

13,716 

12,714 

1,002 

26,500 

26,500 

7 

139 

72 

67 

130 


9 






10 

6 

4 

32 

14 

18 

<24,349 

11,500 

1,092 

<11,757 

27,169 

26,897 

272 

150,000 

150,000 

8 

56 


56 

30 

2 

23 


1 

1 


1 

1 


1 

19 


19 

5,300 

4,600 

700 


5,300 

5,000 

300 

22,000 

20,000 

9 

234 

(i) 

(1) 

158 


76 


4 

0) 

(*) 



93 

53 

40 

20,020 

10,896 

450 

8,427 

247 

24,023 

24,023 


( 5 ) 

( 5 ) 

10 

59 

25 

34 

45 


14 







26 

20 

6 

6,117 

2,486 

1,692 

1,415 

524 

12,814 

12,685 

129 

0) 


11 

314 


314 

309 

.... 

5 



i 

.... 


4 

.... 

4 

64 


64 

28,713 

10,053 

8,351 

9,760 

549 

27,712 

26,712 

1,000 

100,000 

100,000 

12 


6 Included in report of Mercy Home. 


< Includes $9,76? board of academic pupils, 




































































































































































































88 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table I.— INSTITUTIONS FOR THE 


« 

A 

a 

3 

a 

a 

o 

'■3 

B 

a 

m 

a 


13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 
21 
22 

23 

24 

25 

26 

27 

28 

29 

30 

31 

32 

33 

34 

35 

36 

37 

38 

39 

40 

41 

42 

43 

44 

45 

46 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


CALIFORNIA—Continued. 

Los Angeles —Continued. 

Maud B. Booth Home. 

1511 West Twenty-third St. 
Regini Coeli Orphan Asylum ... 
610 North Hill St. 

Victoria Home. 

2414 Griffith Ave. 

Working Boys’ Club. 

2205 South San Pedro. 
Lytton: 

Golden Gate Orphanage. 


Mission San Jose: 

St. Mary’s Orphanage. 


Oakland: 

Children’s Home. 

393 Forty-fifth St. 

Fred Finch Orphanage. 

3670 Peralta Ave. (Fruitvale). 

Juvenile Detention Home. 

413 Nineteenth St. 

Smith’s Cottages. 

Fourth and Cottage Aves. 
Pasadena: 

Pasadena Children’s Training Society . 
Wilson Ave. and Delmar St. 
Sacramento: 

Home of the Merciful Savior for Invalid 
Children. 

3410 J St. 

Sacramento Children’s Home. 

2330 Ninth St. 

Sacramento Protestant Orphan Asylum. 
Palmetto Heights (R. D. Box‘24$). 

Stanford-Lathrop Memorial Home. 

800 N St. 

San Anselmo: 

Presbyterian Oiphanage and Farm. 

Fairfax roaa. 

San Bernardino: 

Orphans’ Home. 

246 Base Line. 

St. Catherine’s Orphan Asylum.. 

512 E St. 

San Diego: 

Children’s Home. 

Sixteenth and Ash Sts. 

San Francisco: 

Babies’ Aid. 

487 Twenty-ninth Ave. 

Bertha Juilly Home for Children. 

Lomita Park. 

Boys’ and Girls’ Home School. 

460 Baker St. 

Infants’ Shelter.. 

1025 Shotwell St. 

McKinley Orphanage.. 

3841 Nineteenth St. 

Maria Kip Orphanage.. 

520 Lake St. 

Mount St. Joseph’s Infant Orphan Asy¬ 
lum. 

Silver Ave. 

Mount St. Joseph’s Orphan Asylum_ 

N and Bay View Sts. 

Pacific Hebrew Orphan Asylum.. 

600 Devisadero St. 

San Francisco Nursery for Homeless 
Children. 

Lake St. and Fourteenth Ave. 

San Francisco Protestant Orphan 
Asylum. 

Haight St. 

Youth’s Directory.. 

720 Church St. 

San Gabriel: 

San Gabriel Masonic Home. 


Supervised or conducted by— 


Volunteers of America. 

Sisters of the Sacred Heart.. 

Children’s Home Society of 
California. 

Private individual. 


Salvation Army. 


Sisters of St. Dominic. 


Ladies’ Relief Society of 
Oakland. 

Methodist Episcopal Church. 


County of Alameda. 
Private corporation. 


Private corporation. 


Protestant Episcopal Dio¬ 
cese of Sacramento. 


Private corporation. 
Private corporation. 


San Jose: 

Home of Benevolence. 

Martha and Eleventh Sts. 

Notre Dame Institute for Orphan Girls. 

596 South Second. 

1 Not reported. 

* Included in report of Children’s Home Society of California, 
a Includes 25 boarders. 


Roman Catholic Diocese of 
Sacramento. 

Presbyterian Church.. 

County of San Bernardino.. 

Sisters of the Immaculate 
Heart of Mary. 

Private corporation. 


Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Boys’ and Girls’ Aid Society. 

Private corporation. 

Methodist Episcopal Church. 

Private corporation (Episco¬ 
pal). 

Sisters of Charity (St. Vin¬ 
cent de Paul). 

Sisters of Charity (St. Vin¬ 
cent de Paul). 

Pacific Hebrew Orphan 
Asylum and Home Society 

Private corporation. 


Private corporation. 
Private corporation. 


Masonic Grand Lodge of 
California. 

Private corporation. 

Sisters of Notre Dame. 




9 

> 


© 






*© 

O 

9 

U 

i 

t£> 

O 

-4-i 




Class of children received. 


a 

«3 

8 





•d 

9 

2 

O 

o 

© 





a 

A 

o 






3 


9 

g 



© 


V-. 

9 


© 

• 





O 

g 

2 

03 

© 

g 


£ 

o 

O 

£ 

(2 

£ 

S 


Dependent children. 

1900 

Yes. 


6 

83 

45 

38 

Orphan and abandoned 

1905 

No. 


6 

59 


59 

girls. 







121 

Homeless, neglected, and 
dependent children. 

1891 

Yes. 

.... 

17 

262 

141 

100 


Wayward, homeless, and 

1906 

No. 

2 

3 

100 

. . . . 

friendless boys over 16. 








Orphan, dependent, delta- 

1894 

Yes. 

11 

20 

101 

69 

32 

quent, and wayward chil- 








dren. 








Orphan, homeless, and neg- 

1894 

Yes. 


2 

76 

.... 

76 

lected girls, and boarders. 








Dependent, delinquent, and 

1872 

No. 

.... 

9 

49 

32 

17 

homeless children. 

Orphan and homeless chil- 

1891 

No. 

3 

13 

63 

39 

24 

dren. 

Children awaiting action of 

1909 

Yes. 


5 

435 

354 

81 

court. 

Homeless girls under 14. 

1901 

No. 

9 

10 

4 

.... 

4 

Orphan and deserted chil¬ 
dren. 

1902 

No. 

3 

9 

29 

13 

16 

Sick and incurable children . 

1907 

Yes. s 

.... 

5 

19 

6 

13 

Orphan and abandoned chil- 

1890 

0) 

(*) 

0) 

(0 

0) 

( l ) 

dren. 





Orphan, abandoned, and 

1867 

Yes. 

7 

12 

58 

34 

24 

delinquent children. 
Abandoned and homeless 

1900 

Yes. 


2 

16 


16 

girls. 








Orphan, abandoned, and 

1895 

Yes. 


9 

30 

14 

16 

homeless children. 








Orphan, abandoned, and 

1892 

Yes. 


2 

30 

14 

16 

other homeless children. 
Orphan girls . 

1885 

No. 


2 

13 


13 

Needv children . 

1887 

Yes. 


8 

38 

19 

19 

Foundlings and abandoned 

1868 

Yes. 


1 

46 

30 

16 

children. 








Orphan children and found- 

1898 

Yes. 

7 

(>) 

33 

18 

15 

lings. 

Dependent and delinquent 

1874 

Yes. 

. . . . 

16 

163 

163 


boys. 

Working mothers’ children.. 

1871 

Yes. 

. . . . 

14 

78 

44 

34 

Orphan and abandoned chil¬ 
dren. 

1897 

No. 

.... 

6 

17 

5 

12 

Orphan,homeless, and needy 

1890 

No. 

. . • . 

8 

30 

.... 

30 

girls. 

Orphan, abandoned, and 

1852 

Yes. 


27 

250 

139 

111 

dependent children. 








Orphan, abandoned, and 

1852 

Yes. 


13 

14S 


14S 

dependent girls, and 








boarders. 

Jewish orphan and aban- 

1871 

No. 


28 

42 

22 

20 

doned children. 

Orphan, abandoned, and 

1892 

Yes. 


12 

24 

16 

8 

homeless children. 








Orphan children. 

1851 

No. 


15 

33 

15 

IS 

Homeless boys. 

1874 

Yes. 


5 

318 

318 

Orphan children of Masons.. 

189S 

No. 


11 

19 

13 

6 

Orphan, homeless, and neg- 

1877 

Yes. 


7 

20 

10 

10 

lected children. 

Orphan girls. 

1893 

No. 


3 

20 


20 






CHILDREN RECEIVED FOR FIRST 
TIME IN 1910. 


Through— 

Public officials. 

Officials of the 

institution. 

Child-placing 

societies. 

Relati ves or 

friends of child. 

Other agencies. 




83 





50 

2 

68 



138 

56 

10 

5 

.... 

1 

84 

62 



39 


23 



46 

7 

3 



40 

6 




63 


413 



22 




4 





29 


7 



5 

7 

0) 

(») 

0) 

( l ) 

c) 

14 



44 


( l ) 

0) 

( l ) 

( l ) 

0) 

4 

.... 

1 

25 

.... 

3 



23 

4 




13 


4 

( l ) 

5 

( l ) 

3 

26 

0) 







33 

102 

.... 

13 

36 

12 

7 



66 

5 




17 


6 



24 


57 

40 

.... 

75 

78 

49 

.... 

7 

92 

.... 




42 




' 

24 





33 


50 

110 

.... 

150 

8 




19 





20 





20 







4 Included in report of Old Ladies’ Home. 
6 Also Chinese. 

6 Includes 18 boarders. 














































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


89 


CARE OF CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 



u 

% 

3 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 

21 

22 

23 

24 

' 25 

26 

27 

28 

29 

30 

31 

- 32 

33 

34 

35 

36 

i 37 

i 38 

39 

i 40 

i 41 

42 

43 

) 44 

) 45 

) 46 




























































































































































































































90 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table I.— INSTITUTIONS FOR THE 


D 

rO 

s 

a 

a 

a 

o 


47 

48 

49 

50 

51 

52 

53 

54 

55 

56 


2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


Supervised or conducted by— Class of children received. 


C A LI F O R NI A-Continued. 
San Lorenzo: 

Union Orphanage. 


San Mateo: 

Armitage Orphanage.. 

504 Kearney St., San Francisco 
(office). 

San Rafael: 

St. Vincent’s Orphan Asylum.. 

St. Vincent P. O. 

Santa Barbara: 

St. Vincent’s Institute.. 

De La Vina St. 

Santa Cruz: 

Holy Cross Convent Orphan Asylum... 
Mission Hill. 

South Pasadena: 

Home for Friendless Children. 

Mission St. and Orange Grove Ave. 
Stockton: 

Children’s Home.. 

1308 Lafayette St. 

Uklah: 

Albertinum Orphanage. 


Vallejo: 

Good Templars’ Home for Orphans. 
Watsonville: 

St. Francis’ Orphanage. 


COLORADO. 

Denver: 

Clifton Training School for Girls.. 

Eighth and Oneida Sts. (Montclair 
P. O.). 

Colorado Children’s Home. 

3545 Raleigh St. 

Colorado Christian Home. 

4325 W est Twenty-ninth Ave. 

Denver Orphans’ Home. 

Colfax Ave. and Albion St. 

Detention Home. 

2844 Downing St. 

E. M. Byer’s Home for Boys. 

64 West Alameda Ave. 

Home League Orphanage.. 

5050 Newton St. 

Lenox Home for Children. 

2949 West Thirty-seventh Ave. 

Regina Coeli Orphanage.. 

4825 Boulevard F. 

St. Clara’s Orphanage. 

3801 West Twenty-ninth Ave. 

St. Vincent’s Home.. 

Lowell Boulevard (Highlands Sta.). 

State Home for Children. 

2305 South Washington St. 

Pueblo: 

McClelland Orphanage. 

106 Lake Ave. 

Sacred Heart Orphanage. 

Sprague Ave. 

CONNECTICUT. 

Bridgeport: 

Bridgeport Protestant Orphan Asylum. 
Ellsworth St. and Fairfield Ave. 

Cromwell: 

Swedish Christian Orphanage. 


Danbury: 

Children’s Home. 

57 Toron Hill Ave. 

East Windsor: 

Hartford County Temporary Home... 
Gardner St. 

Haddam: 

Middlesex County Temporary Home.. 
Main. 

Hartford: 

Hartford Orphan Asylum. 

171 Putnam St. 

St. James’ Orphan Asylum. 

91 Church St. 

Watkinson Juvenile Asylum. 

1100 Albany Ave. (P. O. Box 335). 


State Building Trades Coun¬ 
cil. 

Episcopal Church. 


Brothers of the Christian 
Schools. 

Sisters of Charity. 

Sisters of Charity. 

Boys’ and Girls’ Aid Society 

Private corporation. 

Dominican Sisters. 

Good Templars of California 
Franciscan Fathers. 


City Temple Institutional 
Society. 

Children’s Home Society of 
Colorado. 

National Benevolent Associ¬ 
ation of Christian Church. 
Private corporation.. 


City and County of Denver. 

Private corporation. 

Home League of America .. 

City Temple Institutional 
Society. 

Missionary Sisters of the 
Sacred Heart. 

Franciscan Sisters. 


Sisters of Charity. 
State of Colorado. 


Associated Charities of 
Pueblo. 

Franciscan Sisters.. 


Private corporation. 


Eastern Swedish Mission 
Association. 


Private corporation.. 
County of Hartford... 
County of Middlesex. 


Private corporation. 

Sisters of Mercy. 

Private corporation. 


Orphan and abandoned 
children. 

Orphan, destitute, and 
abandoned boys. 


Orphan, dependent, and 
abandoned boys under 14. 

Orphan and abandoned 
children. 

Orphan and dependent girls, 
and boarders. 

Orphan and other needy 
children. 

Orphan or abandoned chil¬ 
dren. 

Orphan and dependent 
boys from 3 to 10. 

Orphan and abandoned 
children, and boarders. 

Orphan, abandoned, and 
neglected boys. 


Dependent and 
girls. 


homeless 


Homeless and dependent 
children. 

Orphan children. 


Needy children. 


Children awaiting action of 
court. 

Orphan boys. 


Orphans, and children of 
widowed working parents. 
Dependent children.. 


Orphan and homeless girls.. 

Orphan and homeless chil¬ 
dren. 

Orphan and othei homeless 
boys. 

Dependent and neglected 
children. 


Destitute children. 
Orphan children.. 


Orphan and destitute chil¬ 
dren. 

Waifs, orphan and depend¬ 
ent children. 

Orphan and homeless chil¬ 
dren from 4 to 14. 

Dependent and neglected 
children. 

Dependent and neglected 
children. 

Indigent and dependent 
children. 

Orphan, destitute, and neg¬ 
lected children. 

Homeless boys over 12. 


'd 

a 

3 

o 


1909 

1886 

1855 

1858 

1862 

1888 

1885 

1904 

1869 

1869 

1892 

1892 

1906 

1877 

1903 
1892 
1896 

1892 

1904 
1891 
1882 
1896 

1893 
1903 

1869 

1900 

1875 

1883 

1883 

1829 

1852 

1862 


1 Not reported. 


2 Includes 5 


Colored children received. 

Number of cottages. 

Paid employees at close of year. 

CHILDREN RECEIVED FOR 
TIME IN 1910. 

FIRST 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Through— 

Public officials. 

Officials of the 

institution. 

Child-placing 

societies. 

Relatives or 

friends of child. 

Other agencies. 

Yes. 

3 

6 

27 

14 

13 




27 


0) 

<») 

U) 

0) 

0) 


0) 

0) 

( l ) 

0) 

(>) 

Yes. 

•••* 

36 

212 

212 

... 

107 

.... 

44 

51 

10 

No. 


3 

21 

1 

20 

3 



18 


No. 


1 

53 


53 

18 



35 


Yes. 


9 

96 

49 

47 




96 


No. 

. . . . 

3 

(') 

0) 

(*) 

0) 

C 1 ) 

( l ) 

( l ) 

0) 

No. 

.... 

9 

41 

41 

.... 

10 

16 

7 

6 

2 

Yes. 


12 

52 

33 

19 

14 



38 


Yes. 


20 

100 

100 


33 



67 


No. 


11 

104 


104 




104 


Yes. 


4 

42 

20 

22 


9 

9 

24 


No. 


4 

34 

14 

20 

1 



33 


No. 


15 

203 

104 

99 

(i) 



( l ) 


Yes. 

1 

4 

485 

349 

136 

485 




No. 

1 

2 

22 

22 


(») 

( l ) 

.... 

( l ) 

0) 

No. 

.... 

5 

67 

39 

28 

5 

14 

.... 

48 

.... 

No. 


11 

65 

47 

18 

8 



57 


No. 


2 

30 


30 

5 



20 

5 

No. 


2 

184 

35 

149 

8 



172 

4 

No. 


2 

225 

225 





195 

30 

Yes. 

4 

29 

153 

73 

80 

153 





0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

(0 

0) 

(») 

0) 

0) 

(0 

0) 

No. 


0) 

110 

37 

73 




(i) 

(>) 

No. 


7 

10 

7 

3 




10 

No. 


5 

12 

9 

3 




12 


Ves. 


6 

8 

5 

3 

8 





Ves. 


13 

66 

40 

26 

66 





Yes. 


7 

27 

19 

8 

27 





Yes. 


25 

61 

34 

27 




61 


Yes. 

(*) 

0) 

(>) 

0) 

( l ) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

(») 

Ves. 

.... 

12 

21 

21 





21 

.... 


boarders. 





















































































































GENERAL TABLES 


91 


CARE OF CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


CHILDREN IN THE 
CLOSE OF 

INSTITUTION 

YEAR. 

AT 

CHILDREN 
OUTSIDE BUT 
UNDER 
SUPERVISION. 

CHILDREN 
PLACED IN 
FAMILIES 
DURING 
YEAR. 

CHILDREN 
DISCHARGED 
DURING YEAR. 

RECEIPTS 

DURING YEAR. 


PAYMENTS DURING 
YEAR. 

r c3 

o 

£ 

"c3 

3 

© 

a 

© 

P*H 

Dependent. 

w 

y 4 

.b 

W> 

Ih 

o 

w 

>» 

o 

43 

W> 

.a 

.3 

Ut 

o 

£ 

fl 

© 

3 

o< 

fl 

P 

Total. 

Derived from— 

a . 
03 & 
2-9 

Si 

O 

o 

$ 

© 

§'42 

13 

> 

3 

O) 

43 

-+-> 

O 

13 

-*-> 

o 

§ 

13 

a 

© 

13 

a 

© 

o 

H 

§ 

*33 

a 

J© 

*c3 

a 

© 

P*H 

13 

o 

© 

13 

a 

JD 

13 

a 

© 

E*i 

Ap- 

pro- 

pria- 

tions. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources 

Total. 

For 

run¬ 

ning 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

32 

19 

13 

32 











(i) 

m 

(1) 

$5 000 


$5,000 



$8.000 

$6,000 

$2,000 

(*) 

0) 


(») 

(9 

(9 

0) 

(9 

( i ) 

(>) 

.... 

( i ) 

(9 

.... 

(9 

(9 

\ J 

<9 

(9 

(9 

(9 

(9 

(9 

( i ) 

(9 

514 

514 

.... 

314 

.... 

185 

.... 

15 

53 

53 

.... 

27 

27 

. . .. 

231 

231 

• - • - 

66,960 

$45,120 

189 

$5,168 

$16,483 

64,766 

64,766 


105 


105 

72 


33 









15 


15 

13,971 

4,628 

4,654 

1 013 

3,676 

13,822 

11,979 

1,843 

84 


84 

51 


2 33 






5 


5 

49 


49 

11,378 

7,001 

1,837 

2,012 

528 

11,280 

8,159 

3,121 

125 

75 

50 

125 








2 

2 


76 

45 

31 

10,794 

6,896 

1,188 

2,710 


10,429 

10,429 


24 

(!) 

e> 

24 











(i) 

(i) 

(») 

2,643 

326 

2,317 

3,804 

3,804 


110 

110 

83 


27 



3 

3 


14 

14 


(l) 

(i) 

10,972 

9,648 

238 

1,000 

86 

10,972 

8,972 

2,000 

113 

75 

38 

103 


3 10 



1 


i 

16 

7 

9 

37 

14 

23 

13,675 

7,538 

642 

3,265 

2,230 

14,479 

13,219 

1,260 

265 

265 


161 

.... 

77 

.... 

27 


o) 


26 

26 


83 

83 


30,590 

15,496 

1,668 

3,378 

10,048 

30,832 

30,832 

67 


67 



67 









(>) 


(9 

11,579 


5,523 

6,056 


12,019 

8,122 

3,897 

10 

5 

5 

7 


2 


1 

18 

8 

10 

42 

20 

22 


3,065 


2,621 

230 

214 

3,074 

3,074 


21 

7 

14 

12 


9 









22 

13 

9 

2,835 


2,010 

597 

228 

2,936 

2,786 

150 

113 

(!) 

(!) 

(*) 


(!) 









176 

98 

78 

18,589 

3,000 

5,774 

5,748 

4,067 

18,114 

16,758 

1,356 

0) 

(!) 

(9 


<9 


0) 







m 

(i) 

(9 

5,600 

5,000 

600 

5,600 

5,600 

26 

26 

(i) 


0) 

(>) 

8 

8 


6 

6 


\ / 

16 

16 

4,167 

500 

2,028 

1,639 

3,981 

3,981 


42 

(i) 

( l ) 

42 



0) 

(i) 

(i) 



m 

(i) 

(i) 

5,307 


3,390 

1,464 

453 

6,063 

6,063 


73 

53 

20 

59 


14 



\ / 

(>) 

(9 

( l ) 

38 

25 

13 

\ / 

35 

20 

15 

9,244 


2,276 

6,968 


9,244 

8,303 

941 

106 


106 

96 


10 







3,200 


2,500 

700 


6,644 

5,644 

1,000 

228 

73 

155 

181 


47 









39 

16 

23 

14,320 


8,074 

6,246 


12,211 

11,207 

1,004 

225 

225 


130 

2 

93 









203 

203 


14,132 


2,550 

3,600 

7,982 

14,058 

14,058 


243 

148 

95 

m 

(’ll 

m 

CD 

(1) 

.385 

205 

180 

172 

84 

88 

42 

28 

14 

66,254 

66,254 

66,254 

41,254 

25,000 

(*) 

(») 

(>) 

V ) 

(>) 

(■) 

\ / 

(9 

V. / 

0) 

(9 

(>) 

0) 

(9 

(9 

(9 

0) 

(9 

<9 

( i ) 

(9 

(9 

o) 

<9 

(9 

( i ) 

( i ) 

o) 

175 

86 

89 

172 

3 










66 

21 

45 

(!) 

C 1 ) 

C) 

0) 

( l ) 

0) 

( l ) 

0) 

53 

30 

23 

39 


14 



12 

9 

3 

6 

6 


20 

12 

8 

6,448 

(9 

(i) 

(9 

( l ) 

8,296 

8,248 

48 

67 

49 

18 

66 


1 



3 

2 

1 

3 

3 


7 

4 

3 

6,641 


4,294 

1,431 

916 

6,077 

6,077 


12 

m 

(l\ 

4 


8 









5 

1 

4 

1,632 


172 

1,420 

40 

1,691 

1,691 


104 

\ / 

65 

39 



104 






120 

71 

49 

7 

4 

3 

41,706 

41,483 



223 

41,262 

17,689 

23,573 

57 

44 

1.3 



57 



70 

40 

30 

32 

25 

7 

2 

2 


12,974 

12,974 




12,974 

10,520 

2,454 

ion 

73 

47 

7Q 


4J 



1 

1 

1 

1 


48 

30 

18 

26,950 

850 

4,900 

21,200 

26,950 

26,950 


0) 

<9 

0) 

<9 

(9 

( l ) 

( l ) 

( l ) 

0) 

0) 

( i ) 

( i ) 

(9 

<9 

<9 

(•) 

(9 

(9 

(9 

( i > 

(9 

(>) 

( i ) 

o) 

( i ) 

31 

31 


90 


11 









27 

27 


21,796 



1,104 

20,692 

22,899 

22,899 



.... 























3 Boarders. 


VALUE OF 
PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution nuinlier. 


Total 

(includ¬ 

ing 

invested 

funds). 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

$2,000 

$2,000 

47 

( i > 

(9 

48 

200,000 

200,000 

49 

16,000 

16,000 

50 

50,000 

50,000 

51 

30,000 

30,000 

52 

23,000 

3,000 

53 

20,000 

20,000 

54 

62,667 

62,667 

55 

155,000 

150,000 

56 

60,000 

60,000 


1 

3,000 

3,000 


2 

21,000 

21,000 


3 

73,500 

40,000 


4 

22,000 

22,000 


5 

18,000 

18,000 


6 

10,000 

10,000 


7 

40,000 

40,000 


8 

17,000 

17,000 


9 

225,000 

225,000 

10 

250,000 

250,000 

11 

137,133 

137,133 

12 

( i ) 

(9 

13 

(9 

(9 

14 

(9 

70,500 


1 

8,000 

8,000 


2 

18,500 

10,000 


3 

50,000 

50,000 


4 

25,000 

25,000 


5 

500,000 

100,000 


6 

0) 

(9 


7 

345,000 

75,000 


8 


i 






































































































































































Institution number. 


92 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table I.— INSTITUTIONS FOR TIIE 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


9 

10 

11 

12 

13 i 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 
21 
22 
23 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 


CONNECTICUT—Continued. 
Litchfield: 

Connecticut George Junior Republic... 
Mount Carmel: 

Mount Carmel Children’s Home. 

New Britain: 

Polish Orphanage. 

Gold St. 

The Children’s Home. 

Rocklifle Heights. 

New Haven: 

New Haven Orphan Asylum. 

610 Elm St. 

St. Francis Orphan Asylum. 

Whitney Ave. and Highland St. 
Newington: 

Virgihia T. Smith Home for Crippled 
and Incurable Children. 

Cedar St. 

Norwalk: 

Fairfield County Temporary Home. 

Westport Ave. 

Norwich: 

New London County Temporary Home. 
Smith Ave. 

Rock Nook Children’s Home. 

Orange: 

New Haven County Temporary Home. 
Campbell Ave. (West Haven P. O.). 
Putnam: 

Windham County Temporary Home... 
Box 58. 

Stamford: 

Children’s Home. 

938 East Main St. 

Vernon: 

Tolland County Temporary Home. 

Rockville, R. D. 1. 

Winsted: 

William L. Gilbert Home. 

Williams Ave. 

DELAWARE. 

Clayton: 

St. Joseph’s Industrial School for Col¬ 
ored Boys. 

Delaware City: 

St. James’ Protectory. 

Wilmington: 

Delaware Orphans’ Home and Indus¬ 
trial School. 

P. O. Box 181. 

Home for Friendless and Destitute 
Children. 

St. Peter’s Female Orphan Asylum_ 

600 West St. 

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA. 
Washington: 

Bell Home.'._ 

Anacostia (Station H). 

Children’s Temporary Home. 

607 Howard Place NW. 

German Orphan Asylum. 

Anacostia. 

Home for Friendless Girls. 

2533 Sixth St.NW. 

Industrial Home School.. 

2525 Wisconsin Ave. NW. 
Industrial Home School for Colored 
Children. 

Blue Plains. 

St. Ann’s Infant Asylum. 

2300 K St.NW. 

St. John’s Orphanage. 

1922 F St. NW. 

St. Joseph’s Male Orphan Asylum. 

924 H St.NW. 

St. Rose’s Industrial School. 

California Ave. and Phelps Place, 
NW. 

St. Vincent’s Orphan Asylum. 

Edgewood. 

1 Not reported. 


Supervised or conducted by— 

1 

Class of children received. 

Year founded. 

Colored children received. 

Number of cottages. 

Paid employees at close of year. 

Total. 0 

3 

Connecticut George Junior 

Wayward boys. 

1904 

Yes. 

2 

7 

12 

Republic Association. 







Private corporation. 

Homeless children from 3 

1896 

No. 

.... 

6 

4 


to 12. 






Bernardine Sisters of St. 

Orphan and homeless chil- 

1904 

Yes. 

2 


32 

Francis of Assisi. 

dren. 






Private corporation. 

Destitute children. 

1903 

Yes. 

4 

11 

14 

Private corporation. 

Orphan, neglected, and des- 

1833 

Yes. 


23 

50 


titute children. 






Sisters of Mercy. 

Orphan, homeless, and des- 

1852 

Yes. 

.... 

20 

128 


titute children. 






Connecticut Children’s Aid 

Mentally bright but crip- 

1898 

Yes. 


26 

27 

Society. 

pled and ailing children. 






County of Fairfield. 

Dependent and neglected 

1884 

Yes. 


9 

84 


children. 






County of New London. 

Dependent and neglected 

1884 

Yes. 


9 

29 


children. 






L T nited Workers. 

Temporarily homeless chil- 

1879 

Yes. 

.... 

7 

13 


dren. 






County of New Haven. 

Dependent and neglected 

1884 

Yes. 


23 

102 


children. 






County of Windham. 

Neglected children. 

1883 

Yes. 


5 

30 

Private corporation. 

Orphan and homeless boys.. 

1895 

No. 

1 

5 

7 

County of Tolland. 

Dependent and neglected 

1883 

Yes. 


6 

9 


children. 






Private corporation. 

Homeless children. 

1889 

Yes. 


27 

73 

Sisters of St. Francis. 

Orphan and homeless boys.. 

1895 

Yes. 

3 

16 

20 

Sisters of St. Francis. 

Orphan and destitute boys.. 

1879 

No. 

.... 

2 

8 

Private corporation. 

Orphan and neglected chil- 

1898 

( 3 ) 


6 

2 


dren. 






Private organization. 

Friendless and destitute 

1804 

No. 


8 

43 


children, and boarders. 






Sisters of Charity. 

Orphan girls. 

1829 

No. 



19 

Private corporation (Epis- 

Foundlings, orphan, and 

1909 

No. 

3 

6 

6 

copal). 

homeless children. 






Private organization. 

Delinquent, indigent, and 

1899 

( 3 ) 

.... 

8 

52 


neglected children. 






Private corporation. 

Dependent children from 3 

1879 

No. 

.... 

6 

9 


to 12. 






Woman’s Union Christian 

Orphan, indigent, and un- 

1887 

( 3 ) 

.... 

2 

12 

Association. 

protected girls, 5 and over. 






District of Columbia. 

Dependent and delinquent 

1861 

No. 

.... 

18 

57 


children. 






District of Columbia. 

Destituteand wayward boys. 

1907 

Yes. 

3 

13 

42 

Sisters of Charity. 

Orphan children and found- 

1860 

No. 


4 

82 


lings. 






Private corporation (Epis- 

Orphan, homeless, and des- 

1870 

No. 

.... 

7 

25 

copal). 

titute children. 






Sisters of the Holy Cross. 

Orphan boys. 

1854 

No. 


3 

28 

Sisters of Charity. 

Orphan and homeless girls 

1868 

No. 


3 

32 


from 14 to 18. 






Sisters of Charity. 

Orphan girls from 4 to 14.... 

1814 

No. 

.... 

2 

42 


time in 1910. 


12 

2 

26 

10 

28 

81 

17 

0) 

16 

8 

(‘) 

20 

7 
6 

40 

20 

8 
2 

32 


3 

28 

4 

34 

42 

52 

10 

28 


6 

4 

22 

47 

10 

0) 

13 

5 

0) 

10 


3 

33 


11 

19 


3 

24 

5 

12 

23 

30 

15 


32 


42 


Through- 


1 

77 


84 

29 


102 

30 


30 

1 

8 


17 

42 

66 


® 

o-2 

If 

6-9 

O 


12 


to 

a 

SJ 

2 ? 

Zi w 

X3 

O 


10 


o 

cos 

•■s 

>■ S-. 

o 

ca’o 


14 

41 

5 


13 


7 

9 

43 


9 

12 


25 

28 

15 

42 


32 

8 

46 


28 5 

19.... 


40 


16 


12 


2 Included in report of Connecticut Children’s Aid Society, Hartford, 


8 Colored only, 

























































































































GENERAL TABLES 


93 


CARE OF CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


CHILDREN IN *THE INSTITUTION 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

AT 

CHILDREN 
OUTSIDE BUT 
UNDER 
SUPERVISION. 

CHILDREN 
PLACED IN 
FAMILIES 
DURING 
YEAR. 

CHILDREN 
DISCHARGED 
DURING YEAR. 

RECEIPTS 

DURING YEAR. 


PAYMENTS DURING 
YEAR. 

VALUE OF 
PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Total. 

© 

a 

© 

’o3 

a 

© 

Dependent. 

Th 

'So 

Ih 

o 

CO 

>> 

o 

rO 

w> 

g 

3 

(-1 

o 

£ 

4-3 

a 

© 

3 

cr 

.9 

*© 

A 

Total. 

Derived from— 


T3 

P . 
03 & 
2-9 

P £3 

!§ 
Pi o 

o 

1 

5 

► 

5 

u 

© 

A 

o 

< 

*03 

4-3 

o 

Eh 

^© 

X 

© 

*3 

a 

© 

Ph 

*3 

4-> 

o 

H 

© 

*3 

x 

© 

a 

© 

3 

4J 

O 

Eh 

© 

3 

a 

© 

3 

a 

© 

Ph 

Ap- 

pro- 

pria- 

tions. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources 

Total. 

For 

run¬ 

ning 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total 

(includ¬ 

ing 

invested 

funds). 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

28 

28 






28 







( 1 ) 

0) 


$8,050 


$4,300 


$3,750 

$8,000 

$7, (XX) 

$1,000 

$20,000 

$15,000 

9 

27 

15 

12 

27 





1 


1 




2 

2 


9,045 


7,433 

$1,470 

142 

7,184 

4,813 

2,371 

13,100 

12,000 

10 

24 

IS 

6 

16 


8 









6 

4 

2 

8,887 


1,294 

7,593 

8,738 

8,640 

98 

20,000 

20,000 

11 

79 

52 

27 

67 


12 



5 

2 

3 

6 

4 

2 

13 

11 

2 

12,012 


11,731 


281 

11,673 

6,140 

5,533 

23,000 

10,000 

12 

126 

69 

57 

73 


53 



3 : 

16 

15 

12 

6 

6 

27 

14 

13 

27,839 

$2,500 

123 

2,214 

23,002 

23,361 

20,494 

2,867 

491,323 

75,000 

13 

365 

232 

133 

265 


100 






81 

25 

56 

151 

93 


57,781 

2,500 

5,509 

27,673 

22,099 

47,871 

38,349 

9,522 

565,000 

500,00< 

14 

108 

49 

59 


98 

10 






3 

1 

2 

10 

4 

6 

( 2 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

15 

0) 

0) 

0) 

C 1 ) 

(0 

0) 

0> 

0) 







0) 

( l ) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

( l ) 

0) 

o) 

0) 

( l ) 

16 

91 

54 

37 

17 

74 

136 

58 

78 

48 

23 

25 

25 

17 

8 

12,704 

12,704 

12,704 

12,704 

20,000 

20,000 

17 

21 

13 

8 



21 









14 

(i) 

0) 

4,304 


548 

1,115 

2,641 

4,318 

4,318 


43,271 

10,000 

18 

249 

151 

98 

4 

10 

235 



292 

151 

141 

292 

151 

141 

78 

0) 

(i) 

35,987 

35,987 



35,987 

35,987 


200,000 

200,000 

19 

68 

39 

29 



68 



77 

40 

37 

28 

15 

13 

6 

3 

3 

7,125 


7,065 

60 

8,302 

8,302 


35,000 

35,000 

20 

18 

18 


6 


12 









1 

1 


4,226 


1,588 

708 

1,930 

4,226 

4,226 


54> 439 

15,000 

21 

50 

33 

17 

10 


40 



14 

7 

7 

14 

7 

7 

6 

4 

2 

5,592 

5,371 



221 

5,592 

5,292 

300 

20,000 

20,000 

22 

252 

145 

107 



252 



116 

55 

61 

60 

26 

34 

9 

7 

2 

41,497 



24,241 

17,256 

43,097 

41,497 

1,600 

730,000 

80,000 

23 

80 

80 


65 

1 

14 







12 

12 


17,850 


9,000 

450 

8,400 

17,000 

15,000 

2,000 

108,000 

100,000 

1 

70 

70 


60 


10 









10 

10 


0) 

0) 

475 

150 

200 

2,400 

2,000 

400 

40,000 

40,000 

2 

50 

29 

21 

50 





2 

2 


9 

2 


1 


1 

6,189 

5,939 


250 

6,189 

6,189 


10,500 

8,000 

3 

70 

0) 

(l) 



0 ) 



80 

53 

27 

21 

12 

9 

25 

17 

8 

16,484 


1,323 

1,987 

13,174 

14,071 

9,780 

4,291 

154,100 

49,100 

4 

39 

39 

39 










18 


18 

( l ) 


( l ) 


( l ) 

C) 

0) 


( l ) 

0) 

5 

60 

25 

35 

60 





5 

2 

3 




2 


2 

* 1,400 


1,000 


400 

3,593 

3,593 


63,000 

63,000 

1 

56 

31 

25 



56 



0) 

0) 

(i) 

0) 

(l) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

( 5 ) 

( 5 ) 



C 6 ) 

( 5 ) 

( 5 ) 


0) 

0) 

2 

44 

26 

18 

44 




13 

8 

5 

5 

2 

3 

13 

7 

6 

6,310 

545 

435 

5,330 

6,860 

6,860 


C 1 ) 

0) 

3 

20 


20 

14 


G 



0 


2 

2 


2 

6 


6 

1,150 


800 

350 


1,150 

1,150 


250 

250 

4 

137 

85 

52 

88 

1 

37 


11 

14 

11 

3 

14 

11 

3 

67 

44 

23 

26,500 

23,00C 


1,000 

2,500 

26,500 

25,000 

1,500 

342,550 

342,550 

5 

48 

48 



4 

5 


39 







73 

73 


16,475 

16,11C 



365 

16,475 

15,975 

500 

147,000 

147,000 

6 

87 


32 

87 





75 

49 

26 

17 

8 

9 

65 

37 

28 

9,694 

5,400 

500 

900 

2,894 

9,568 

9,568 


100,000 

100,000 

7 

87 

45 

42 

87 











18 

8 

10 

4,637 


2,944 


1,693 

5,413 

5,413 


119,337 

80,000 

8 

98 

98 


98 











28 

28 


7,065 



2,544 

4,521 

6,865 

6,865 


75,000 

75,000 

9 

85 

85 

85 











30 


30 

18,222 


2,000 

258 

15,964 

18,918 

18,918 


225,000 

225,000 

10 

130 

.... 

130 

130 








4 

f... 

4 

43 

.... 

43 

13,163 

400 

(>) 

t 

o 

(■) 

13,158 

13,158 


o 

150,000 

11 


4 Exclusive of $35,000 for new building. 6 Included in report of Board of Children's Guardians. 





































































































































































































Institution number. 


94 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table I.— INSTITUTIONS FOR THE 


12 

13 

14 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 
7 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 


12 


13 

14 

15 

16 


17 

18 

19 

20 

21 

22 


NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of children received. 

Year founded. 

Colored children received. 

Number of cottages. 

Paid employees at close of year. 

CHILDREN RECEIVED FOR 
TIME IN 1910. 

FIRST 

Is 

-*-D 

O 

H 

G> 

aS 

' rS 

3 

a 

G> 

.a 

e 

o 

t) 

3 

a 

Ph 

Th 

<X> 

XI . 

w a 
o 
os 

J3 3 

CS 4_J 
’o ^ 

g.s 

o 

roug 

BO 

q 

S.g 

2 1 
■d 

o 

h— 

O T3 
w ^ 
Q} X 

c 

m 

d'V 
•—> £ 
©.g 

in 

.g 

’o 

fl 

G> 

t£> 

ai 

o 

X 

-*-> 

O 

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA—Continued. 















W AsmNGTON—Continued. 















Washington City Orphan Asylum 


Orphan and destitute ehil- 

1812 

No. 


19 

46 

28 

18 




46 


1739"FourteentVst. NW. 


dren. 













Washington Home for Foundlings 


Foundlings and boarders. 

1S70 

No. 


18 

31 

17 

14 




31 


1715 Fifteenth St. NW. 















Working Boys’ Home. 

Working Boys’ Home and 

Working and destitute boys. 

1885 

No. 


5 

39 

39 


7 



7 

25 

230 C St.'NW. 

Children’s Aid Association. 













FLORIDA. 















Arcadia: 















Florida Baptist Orphanage. 

Baptist churches of Florida.. 

Orphan children from 3 to 10. 

1904 

No. 

.... 

7 

16 

4 

12 




16 

. . . . 

Belleview: 















Belleview Orphan’s Home. 

Woman’sMissionary Society. 

Orphan children. 

1901 

0 


3 

8 

1 

7 

3 

3 


2 


Jacksonville: 













Orphans’ and Industrial Homo 3 



1894 

( 2 ) 











1628 Franklin St. 

Home Association. 

dren. 












St. Mary’s Home. 

Sisters of St. Joseph. 

Orphan girls. 

1S86 

No. 



12 


12 




12 


427 Ocean St. 















Orange Hill: 















Nettie’s Colored Orphans’ Home 



1894 

Yes. 

1 










Chipley, R. D. 3. 


dren. 













Pensacola: 















Pearl Eagan Home. 

Private corporation. 

Indigent orphan children... 

1893 

No. 


2 

0 

0) 

0) 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

708 East Jordan St. 






Tampa: 















Children’s Home. 

Private corporation. 

Orphan and homeless chil- 

1898 

No. 


6 

60 

33 

27 

15 



45 


North Florida Ave. 


dren. 













GEORGIA. 















Atlanta: 















Carrie Steele Orphanage. 

Private corporation...:. 

Foundlings and crippled, 

1S90 

Yes. 


5 

100 

75 

25 

0) 

0 

0 

0 

0 

901 East Fair St. 


delinquent, and homeless 










children. 













Hebrew Orphans’ Home. 

Independent Order of B’nai 

Orphan children. 

1SS9 

No. 


12 

27 

15 

12 




27 


478 Washington St. 

B’rith. 














Leonard Street Orphans’ Home. 

Private corporation. 

Orphan and homeless girls.. 

1S90 

( 2 ) 


2 

11 


11 




11 


39 Leonard St.* 













Southeastern Orphanage. 

National Benevolent Asso- 

Orphan and homeless chil- 

1904 

No. 


5 

10 

5 

5 




5 

5 


ciat ion of Christian Church. 

dren. 













Augusta: 















Augusta Orphan Asylum. 

Private corporation. 

Orphan children. 

1852 

No. 


8 

10 

3 

7 




10 


“Railroad Ave. and Harper St. 















Shiloh Industrial Orphanage. 

Private corporation. 

Orphan children. 

1S99 

( 2 ) 

2 

3 

8 

3 

5 

3 

2 

2 

1 


Carnes Road (Harrisonville). 














Columbus: 















Girls’ Orphan Home. 

Ladies’ Benevolent Society.. 

Orphan and destitute girls.. 

1S40 

0 

0 

0 

0 

.... 

0) 

0 

( i ) 

0 

0 

0 

Fourth Ave. and Fifteenth St. 















Covington: 















Reed Home and Industrial School. 

Private corporation.. 

Destitute children. 

18S4 

( 2 ) 


3 

6 

5 

1 


3 


3 


Decatur: 














North Georgia Conference Orphans’ 

Methodist Episcopal Church, 

Destitute children. 

1S69 

No. 

9 

22 

80 


35 




80 


Home. 

South. 














IIapeville: 















Georgia Baptist Orphans’ Home. 

Private corporation (Bap- 

Orphan and destitute chil- 

1888 

No. 

5 

17 

45 

25 

20 




45 



tist). 

dren. 













Macon: 















Appleton Church Home. 

Protestant Episcopal Church 

Orphan girls from 2 J to 10.... 

1S70 

No. 


2 

5 


5 

1 



4 


* 649 College St. 













Georgia Colored Industrial and Or- 

Private corporation. 

Orphan and indigent chil- 

1899 

Yes. 


5 

12S 

76 

52 

12 



80 

36 

phans’ Home. 


dren from 4 to 14. 













Hephzibah Orphanage. 

Private corporation. 

Needy children. 

1900 

No. 

4 


15 

4 

11 




15 


South Georgia Conference Orphans’ 

Methodist Episcopal Church, 

Indigent orphan children... 

1872 

No. 

3 

9 

46 

21 

25 

4 

31 


ii 

.... 

Home. 

South. 














121 Pierce St. 















Meansville: 















Bethlehem Home. 

Private organization. 

Dependent or friendless chil- 

1908 

No. 


5 

26 

12 

14 




26 


Route 1. 

' 

dren. 













St. Simons Mills: 















Anson Dodge Home. 

Private organization (Epis- 

Destitute boys. 

1S94 

No. 


3 

5 

5 





5 



copal). 














Savannah: 















Bethesda Orphans’ Home. 

Union Society. 

Needy boys. 

1740 

No. 


17 

19 

19 





19 


R. D. 1. 













Episcopal Orphans’ Home. 

Protestant Episcopal Church 

Orphan and destitute girls... 

1854 

No. 


3 

5 


5 

2 



3 


309*Liberty St., west. 













St. Mary’s Home. 

Sisters of Mercy. 

Orphan girls under 14. 

1876 

No. 



15 


15 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

Thirty-second and Habersham Sts. 










Savannah Female Orphan Asylum. 

Private corporation. 

Orphan and destitute girls.. 

1S01 

No. 


3 

5 


5 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

425 West Oglethorpe Ave. 









Thomasville: 















Vashti Industrial School. 

Woman’s Home Missionary 

Homeless girls. 

1903 

No. 


7 

20 


20 

i 

IS 

1 



East Clay St. 

Society, M. E. Church, 















South. 














Washington: 

\ 














St. Joseph’s Orphanage. 

Sisters of St. Joseph. 

Orphan boys. 

1876 

No. 


6 

18 

18 






18 


1 Not reported. 2 Colored only. 2 Temporarily closed in 1910. 








































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


95 


CARE OF CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


CHILDREN IN THE 
CLOSE OF 

INSTITUTION 

YEAR. 

AT 

CHILDREN 
OUTSIDE BUT 
UNDER 
SUPERVISION. 

CHILDREN 
PLACED IN 
FAMILIES 
DURING 
YEAR. 

CHILDREN 
DISCHARGED 
DURING YEAR. 

RECEIPTS 

DURING YEAR. 

PAYMENTS DURING 
YEAR. 

VALUE OF 
PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

---— 

Institution number. 

Total. 

s 

Female. 

Dependent. 

Working boys or girls. 

Delinquent. 

Total. 

Derived from— 

Orphans and 
foundlings. 

Invalid or defec¬ 
tive. 

All other. 

'eS 

O 

H 

oi 

c3 

s 

Female. 

cd 

o 

Eh 

"cd 

a 

Female. 

Is 

+2 

O 

H 

■S 

cd 

a 

Female. 

Ap- 

pro- 

pria- 

tions. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources 

Total. 

For 

run¬ 

ning 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total 

(includ¬ 

ing 

invested 

funds). 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

140 

66 

74 

114 


26 



17 

10 

7 

4 

3 

1 

40 

18 

22 

$16,520 


$287 

$1,858 

$14,375 

$20,976 

$15,976 

$5,000 

$439,625 

$191,538 

12 

33 

20 

13 

33 





1 

1 





2 


2 

7,807 

$5,400 

678 

1,569 

160 

8,287 

8,287 

144,000 

140,000 

13 

38 

38 




16 

22 








24 

24 


6,030 

• G) 

(!) 

G) 

G) 

5,555 

(i) 

G) 

30,000 

0) 

14 

65 

27 

38 

65 





0) 

0) 

( i ) 

16 

( i ) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

6,151 

6,151 

4,791 

4,791 

37,533 

37,533 

1 

25 

4 

21 

25 






900 

G) 

( i ) 

G) 

G) 

900 

900 


1,000 

1,000 

2 























3 

43 


43 

38 

1 


5 


2 


2 

2 


2 

0) 


0) 

0) 


0) 


(!) 

(!) 

(i) 

G) 

G) 

C 1 ) 

4 

3 

1 

2 

3 











1 


1 

(!) 


(!) 


G) 

180 

ISO 

2,035 

2,035 

5 

23 

0) 

0) 

23 











G) 

G) 

G) 

1,603 

90 

1,309 

204 

1,662 

1,662 


4,750 

4,750 

6 

34 

(!) 

C 1 ) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

( i ) 

(!) 

4 


4 

30 

12 

18 

4,565 

2,400 

1,288 

877 


4,408 

3,722 

686 

16,000 

16,000 

7 

114 

49 

65 

25 

9 

75 

5 




.... 



(!) 

0) 

(!) 

0) 

G) 

0) 

G) 

0) 

3,120 

3,020 

100 

( l ) 

0) 

1 

94 

51 

43 

94 





3 

3 


3 

3 


16 

8 

8 

19,000 

18,000 

1,000 

20,000 

18,000 

2,000 

120,000 

100,000 

2 

63 


63 

43 


20 









5 


5 

4,387 


2,930 

751 

706 

4,925 

4,815 

no 

7,000 

7,000 

3 

30 

17 

13 

26 


4 



15 

8 

7 

11 

6 

5 

7 

4 

3 

4 2,250 


4 1,950 

300 


(!) 

0) 

G) 

5,000 

5,000 

4 

89 

40 

49 

89 











11 

G) 

G) 

21,036 




21,036 

13,358 

13,358 

241,004 

105,092 

5 

59 

29 

30 

59 





12 

5 

7 





3,026 


..3,000 


26 

(!) 

1,000 

0) 

9,000 

9,000 

6 

0) 


g> 

(*) 

(>) 

G) 

g> 

G) 

0) 


( l ) 

.... 

(1) 

- - - - 

o 

G) 

.... 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

7 

38 

21 

17 

38 














(!) 

G) 

800 

G) 

0) 

1,200 

1,200 


6,975 

6,975 

8 

m 

(i) 

m 


(i) 

0) 

(i) 

(i) 




.... 



18 

10 

8 

30,950 

30,500 

450 

23,528 

18,127 

5,401 

136,000 

130,000 

9 

k ) 

206 

(\\ 

\ / 

m 


G) 

G) 

G) 

( l ) 







( l ) 

G) 

C 1 ) 

28,000 


28,000 



28,000 

28,000 


200,000 

200,000 

10 

39 

\ ) 

\ / 

39 

V / 

39 







10 

10 

2,693 


293 


2,400 

2,693 

2,693 


70,538 

35,000 

11 

115 

69 

46 

115 





13 

7 

6 

.... 






7,269 


5 6,569 

700 


& 7,219 

7,219 


17,200 

17,200 

12 

60 

22 

38 

60 





12 

5 

7 

18 

7 

11 

26 

10 

16 

7,856 

800 

0) 

0) 

0) 

7,856 

6,929 

927 

16,000 

16,000 

13 

135 

70 

65 

135 








71 

0) 

(>) 




11,000 


11,000 



11,000 

8,000 

3,000 

100,000 

100,000 

14 

OK 

14 

11 

(l) 

m 








10 

6 

4 

7,000 


4,000 


3,000 

7,500 

6,500 

1,000 

8,000 

8,000 

15 

17 

17 

17 

\ / 




8 

8 


1 

1 





3,200 


200 


3,000 

2,500 

2,500 

40,000 

16 

Qft 

98 


88 


10 







20 

20 


10,312 

2,000 

312 


8,000 

10,000 

10,000 


( l ) 

150,000 

17 

27 

27 

31 


6 



2 


2 







5,673 

600 

499 


4,574 

G) 

4,413 

P) 

0) 

C 1 ) 

18 

72 


72 

72 











C 1 ) 


0) 

11,877 

1,080 

3,285 

570 

6,942 

12,247 

12,247 


125,000 

50,000 

19 

K 


5 

5 











7 


7 

6,002 

1,080 

920 


4.002 

6.363 

6,363 


95.000 

35.000 

20 

75 


75 

72 




3 

40 


40 




10 


10 

10,000 


3,000 


7,000 

10.000 

9,500 

500 

30,000 

30.000 

21 

60 

60 

60 










G) 

G) 


G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

20,000 

G) 

G) 

G) 

22 


4 Exclusive of donations other than cash. 6 Includes $3,583, value of goods. 








































































































































































































96 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table 1 .— INSTITUTIONS FOR THE 


£ 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 
21 
22 

23 

24 

25 

26 

27 

28 

29 

30 

31 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


IDAHO. 

Boise: 

Receiving Home. 

i 740 Warmspring A ve. 
Lewiston: 

Receiving Home for North Idaho. 
1806 Eighteenth Ave. 


ILLINOIS. 

Addison: 

German Lutheran Orphan Asylum. 
Alton: 

Roman Catholic Orphanage.. 

417 Prospect St. 

Andover: 

Swedish Lutheran Orphans’ Home. 
Lynn Center P. O. 

Belleville: 

St. John’s Catholic Orphanage. 


Bloomington: 

Girls’ Industrial Home. 

State and Taylor Sts. 

Cairo: 

Cairo Children’s Home. 

320 Twenty-fifth St. 

Carlinville: 

Bethel Holiness Orphanage. 

736 West Main. 

Chicago: 

Angel Guardian Orphan Asylum. 

2001 Devon Ave. 

Chicago Homes for Boys. 

1506 West Adams St. 

Chicago Nursery and Half Orphan 
Asylum. 

1932 Burling St. 

Chicago Orphan Asylum. 

5120 South Park Ave. 

Danish Orphans’ Home. 

3320 Evergreen Ave. 

Home for Jewish Friendless Children... 
5228 Ellis Ave. (Hyde Park). 

Jewish Orphan Home. 

6208 Drexel Ave. 

Juvenile Detention Home. 

771 Ewing St. 

Louise Juvenile Home for Dependent 
Children. 

6124 Ada St. (Englewood). 

Lutheran Children’s Home. 

1352 Rockwell St. 

Marks Nathan Jewish Orphan Home... 

1243 North Wood St. 

St. Joseph’s Providence Orphan Asylum 
3018 North Fortieth Ave. 

St. Mary’s Home for Children. 

2822 Jackson Boulevard. 

St. Vincent’s Infant Asylum. 

721 La Salle Ave. 

Uhlich Lutheran Orphan Asylum.... 
2014 Burling St. 

Danville: 

Vermilion County Children’s Home... 
Logan Ave. and Williams St. 

Dover: 

Dover Deaconess Home. 

Duquoin: 

Receiving Home.. 


Hdison Park: 

Norwegian Lutheran Children’s Home. 
Norwood Park P. O., R. D. 1. 

Elgin: 

Larkin Home for Children. 

320 South State St. 

Evanston: 

Receiving Home. 

826 Ridge Ave. 

Flanagan: 

Salem Orphanage. 


Freeport: 

St. Vincent’s Orphan Home. 

7 Jefferson St. 

Glenwood: 

Glenwood Manual Training School 
1 Not reported. 2 Estimated. 


Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of children received. 

Year founded. 

Colored children received. 

Number of cottages. 

Paid employees at close of year. 

CHILDR] 

o 

H 

1 

Of 

C3 

3 

Private corporation. 

Orphan and dependent chil- 

1908 

Yes. 


9 

221 

116 


dren. 







Private corporation. 

Orphan, homeless, and 

1908 

Yes. 


2 

28 

13 


abused children. 







Private corporation (Luth- 

Orphan children. 

1873 

No. 


16 

23 

15 

eran). 








Sisters of the Precious Blood. 

Catholic orphan children 

1883 

No. 



52 

37 

from 2 to 1*2. 







Augustana Synod. 

Scandinavian orphan chil- 

1867 

No. 


4 

22 

12 


dren. 







Sisters, Poor Handmaids of 

Orphan and dependent chil- 

1879 

No. 


3 

79 

48 

Jesus Christ. 

dren. 







Private corporation. 

Dependent girls. 

1889 

No. 


'3 

24 


Private corporation. 

Dependent and delinquent 

1902 

No. 


1 

39 

18 


children. 







Holiness Christian Church... 

Orphan and dependent chil- 

1906 

No. 





dren from 2 to 12. 







Private corporation. 

Orphan children... 

1866 

0) 


(*) 

(i) 

(i) 

Protestant Episcopal Church 

Homeless boys. 

1899 

Yes. 

5 

25 

29 

29 

Private corporation. 

Orphans and working wo- 

1861 

Yes. 


28 

83 

43 


men’s children. 







Private corporation. 

Orphan children. 

1849 

Yes. 

6 

48 

141 

78 

Danish Lutheran Church in 

Danish orphan children from 

1883 

No. 


3 

4 

3 

America. 

1 to 14. 







Associated J ewish Charities.. 

Homeless Jewish Children... 

1901 

No. 

.... 

23 

276 

150 

Associated Jewish Charities.. 

Orphan children. 

1893 

No. 

.... 

20 

38 

25 

County of Cook. 

Dependent, truant, and de- 

1906 

Yes. 


27 

3444 

2594 


linquent children. 







Private organization. 

Dependent children. 

1907 

Yes. 

2 


30 

18 

German Missouri Synod. 

Dependent children for tem- 

1908 

No. 


6 

73 

48 


porary care. 







Private corporation. 

Jewish orphans from 5 to 11. 

1905 

No. 

.... 

18 

39 

28 

Sisters of St. Joseph. 

Orphan and destitute boys.. 

1889 

C * 1 * * * * * 7 ) 



73 

73 

Sisters of St. Mary (Epis- 

Dependent children. 

1S95 

No. 


28 

97 

14 

copal). 








Sisters of Charity. 

Foundlings and destitute 

1872 

Yes. 


31 

1000 

431 


children under 7. 







St. Paul’s Lutheran Church. 

German Lutheran orphan 

1867 

No. 


8 

13 

11 


children. 







Private corporation. 

Homeless, neglected, and 

1894 

No. 


5 

96 

48 


delinquent children. 







Congregational Church. 

Dependent orphan children . 

1902 

(i) 

1 

2 



Illinois Children’s Home and 

Dependent children. 

1908 

Yes. 


4 

97 

54 

Aid Society. 








Norwegian Lutheran Chil- 

Norwegian orphan and de- 

1899 

No. 

2 

7 

22 

11 

dren’s Home Society. 

serted children. 







Private corporation. 

Destitute and dependent 

1889 

No. 


2 

10 

3 


children from 3 to 16. 







Illinois Children’s Home and 

Dependent children. 

1907 

Yes. 


9 

217 

120 

Aid Society. 








Defenseless Mennonite 

Orphan and destitute chil- 

1896 

No. 


1 

20 

10 

Church. 

dren. 







Franciscan Sisters of the 

Foundlings and orphan chil- 

1896 

No. 


1 

35 

19 

Sacred Heart. 

dren under 12. 







Private corporation. 

Normal, dependent boys.... 

1887 

Yes. 

ii 

60 

226 

226 


time in 1910. 


105 

15 


Through— 


15 


31 


21 


(') 

40 

63 

1 

126 

13 

850 

12 

25 

11 


83 

569 

2 

48 


43 

11 

7 

97 

10 


Public officials. 

Officials of the 

institution. 

Child-placing 

societies. 

Relatives or 

friends of child. 

Other agencies. 

34 

167 


20 

.... 

26 



2 





23 


.... 



52 


2 

4 

3 

13 

.... 




74 

5 

4 



20 


15 



6 

18 

( i ) 

0) 

( l ) 

0) 

( l ) 

10 




12 



83 




141 




2 



2 




215 

61 





38 


3444 





8 



22 


73 








39 





73 





97 


330 

361 

• . . . 

307 

2 




13 


47 




49 






97 








15 


2 

2 

.... 

6 

. . . . 

217 





5 



15 


5 



30 



153 


731.... 


s Includes report of St. Vincent’s Maternity Hospital. * Included in report of Illinois Children’s Home and Aid Society 























































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


97 


CARE OF CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


CHILDREN IN THE INSTITUTION 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

AT 

CHILDREN 
OUTSIDE BUT 
UNDER 
SUPERVISION. 

CHILDREN 
PLACED IN 
FAMILIES 
DURING 
YEAR. 

CHILDREN 
DISCHARGED 
DURING YEAR. 

RECEIPTS 

DURING YEAR. 

PAYMENTS DURING 
YEAR. 

VALUE OF 
PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Total. 

S 

'cS 

a 

o3 

a 

<15 

Ph 

Dependent. 

Working boys or girls. 

Delinquent. 

Total. 

Derived from— 


Orphans and 
foundlings. 

Invalid or defec¬ 
tive. 

All other. 

c3 

O 

cH 

£ 

S 

£ 

c3 

a 

o 

P ^ 

'cfl 

4-> 

o 

Eh 

5 

C 3 

a 

£ 

a 

05 

Ph 

73 

o 

Eh 

£ 

a 

a 

£ 

73 

a 

05 

p ^ 

Ap- 
p ro¬ 
ta¬ 
tions. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources 

Total. 

For 

run¬ 

ning 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total 

(includ¬ 

ing 

invested 

funds). 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

44 

20 

24 

14 

4 


18 

8 

234 

78 

156 

155 

73 

82 

92 

32 

60 

$33.924 

$30,000 

$3,924 



$33,924 

$10,924 

$23,000 

$63,000 

$63,000 

1 

13 

6 

7 

4 

1 

5 


3 

4 

2 

2 

4 

2 

2 

2 


2 

5,918 

2,263 

3,255 


$400 

3,516 

3,516 


2 

23 

15 

8 

23 





74 

38 

36 




7 

3 

4 

9,754 

9,035 

$719 

7,284 

6,985 

299 

42,000 

42,000 

1 

no 

67 

43 

68 


42 



( i ) 

0) 

0) 

41 

24 

17 




11.185 


2,248 

2,789 

6,148 

8,992 

6,524 

2,468 

85,000 

85,000 

2 

43 

26 

.17 

43 





21 

16 

5 

21 

16 

5 

6 

2 

4 

8,0% 

200 

3,268 

230 

4,398 

22,633 

14,836 

7,797 

69,750 

69,750 

3 

194 

108 

86 

194 











56 

27 

29 

10,331 

0) 

0) 

(!) 

(!) 

10,147 

0) 

(*) 

0) 

25,000 

4 

28 


28 



28 






11 


11 

30 


30 

2,973 

2,285 

. 58 

429 

201 

3,255 

3,255 

9,000 

9,000 

5 

54 

23 

31 

32 


16 


6 

37 

14 

23 




9 

4 

5 

1,562 

360 

1,141 


61 

1,658 

1,558 

100 

3,600 

3,600 

6 

27 

11 

16 

19 

1 

7 












1.584 


1,584 



1,584 

1,584 


1,866 

1,866 

7 

574 

0) 

(») 

574 











0) 

0) 

C 1 ) 

18.527 


8,322 

10,205 


0) 

C 1 ) 

0) 

C 1 ) 

( l ) 

8 

102 

102 

91 

1 


6 

4 

1 

1 


] 

1 


19 

19 

22,361 


6,100 

16,261 

22,361 

14,314 

8,047 

50,000 

50,000 

9 

124 

70 

54 

124 











94 

54 

40 

25,915 


5,680 

6,577 

13,658 

24,551 

24,551 

234,371 

20,000 

10 

200 

104 

96 

187 


13 






4 

2 

2 

117 

59 

58 

47,225 


18, 407 

11,029 

17,789 

38,059 

33,147 

4,912 

626,981 

357,500 

11 

24 

14 

10 

22 




2 




7 

1 

6 

2 

I 

1 

2,896 


2,376 

520 


2,980 

2,980 


21,600 

21,600 

12 

137 

65 

72 



137 









221 

100 

121 

21,363 


17,427 

1,253 

2,683 

21,363 

18.082 

3,281 

175,808 

130,608 

13 

168 

94 

74 

146 


22 









34 

20 

14 

29,910 


1,250 

28,660 

28,109 

28,109 


238,256 

138,232 

14 

65 

42 

23 



2 14 


2 51 







3434 

2583 

851 

37,200 

37,200 


41,518 

37,200 

4,318 

200,000 

200,000 

15 

54 

17 

37 

49 

2 



3 










651 

1 

650 


1,450 

1,450 

4,675 

3,000 

16 

0) 

m 

(i) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 








23 

15 

8 

2,700 

100 

2,000 

600 


2,500 

2,500 


20,000 

20,000 

17 

163 

105 

58 

163 








38 

27 

11 

29,111 


29,036 


75 

29,028 

28,948 

80 

62,316 

60,000 

18 

65 

65 


O) 


0) 






9 

9 


189 

189 


14.914 


12,946 


1,968 

15,298 

14,141 

1,157 

132,300 

132,300 

19 

119 

14 

105 

59 


60 






7 


7 




25,575 


9.477 

9, 453 

6,645 

23,481 

16,591 

6,890 

101,900 

91,900 

20 

250 

178 

72 

230 


20 



1200 

593 

607 

265 

125 

140 

595 

374 

221 

3 48, 737 

12,000 

16,603 

11,466 

8,668 

3 48, 737 

36,648 

12,089 

2 200,000 

200,000 

21 

84 

42 

42 

84 











14 

10 

4 

31,034 


1,106 

3,901 

26,027 

26,165 

14,115 

12,050 

281,934 

275,000 

22 

19 

10 

9 



19 



(>> 

0) 

0) 

0) 

1 (*) 

0) 

(») 

0) 

( l ) 

3,644 

1,121 

1,367 

382 

774 

7,592 

(•) 

0) 

37,600 

32,306 

23 

10 

2 

8 

10 





2 

2 



948 

108 

200 

440 

200 

712 

512 

200 

7,500 

7,500 

24 

96 

ID 

ft 

m 


m 




( 4 ) 

M 


w 


( 5 ) 

( 5 ) 

C 5 ) 

<3,933 


3,933 



* 3,933 

3,933 


4 13,894 

13,894 

25 

85 

48 

37 

^ / 

60 


\ ) 

25 



7 

3 

4 

8,273 


1,534 

2,056 

4,683 

7,159 

7,159 


30,000 

30,000 

26 

29 

m 

m 

22 













(!) 

500 


0) 

500 

2,400 

2,400 


4,500 

4,500 

27 


\ ) 

95 

V ) 

11 

m 


m 



0) 

(i) 


m 

0) 

0) 

6 60 

35 

25 

410,412 


10,412 



no , 412 

10,412 


4 53,974 

53,974 

28 

76 

60 

43 

3.3 

\ ) 

42 


\ ) 

34 



5 

4 

V / 

1 

\ / 

1 

1 

3 


3 

6,716 


2,592 

1,095 

’3,029 

6,765 

5,765 

1,000 

73,400 

73,400 

29 

64 

343 

36 

343 

28 

64 

251 










31 

15 

16 

5,000 


1,500 

3,500 


5,000 

5,000 


20,000 

20,000 

30 


92 






10 

,0 


209 

209 


66,698 

26,839 

16,996 

11,911 

10,952 

66,698 

66,698 


404,990 

344,990 

31 


& Included in report of Evanston Home. 8 Includes statistics of Duquoin Home. 

—7 


44153°—14 






















































































































































































98 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table I.— INSTITUTIONS FOR THE 









I 

;>> 

CHILDREN RECEIVED 

FOR 

FIRST 










TIME IN 

1910. 








>6 


o 









u 

© 





© 

.5 

*® 

o 

© 

i 

© 

C/5 

£ 

o 




Through— 

a 

NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of children received. 


p 

© 

03 

+3 

0$ 

c/a 





© 

& 




p 

p 

a 

.o 




•6 

© 

§ 

a 

1 

O 

O 

*—> 

© 

© 

£ 

ft 




3 

’© 

e 

** d 

«*-. o 
o 

c /5 5 

ii 

ft © 

C/5 ~ 
eg 

► c 

— o 

© 

’© 

fl 

© 

tuO 





° 


© 

S 



© 


o 52 

£.9 

o 


-*-» C/5 

CS'O 

— p 

© © 


§ 

HH 




u 

CQ 

© 

* 

t-4 

o 

6 

a 

3 

55 

TJ 

c3 

Ph 

-£5 

O 

H 

© 

a 

ce 

a 

© 

ft 

3 

3 

ft 

£) 

o 

© 

A 

O 


ILLINOIS—Continued. 
















Harrison: 




(») 











32 



Delinquent and dependent 
boys. 

1907 

1 

4 

2 

2 


2 





Shirland P. O. 












Harvey: 








13 




23 


33 



Orphan and homeless chil¬ 
dren. 

1893 

(<) 

2 

5 

23 

10 





305 One hundred forty-seventh St. 












Hoyleton: 








8 



9 




34 


German Evangelical Synod 
of North America. 

Orphan and homeless chil¬ 
dren. 

1895 

No. 


5 

9 

1 





Irvington: 




13 




25 







12 

35 


Private corporation(Baptist) 

Needy children between 2 
and 15. 

1903 

No. 

2 

4 

25 





Joliet: 





51 











36 



Orphan and homeless chil¬ 
dren. 

1897 

No. 



51 

21 

30 





117 Buell Ave. 




12 

1 



13 


37 

Lutheran Orphanage. 

Augustana Synod. 

Swedish Lutheran orphans .. 

1891 

No. 


9 

18 

6 


4 


Rowell Ave. 

















La Grange: 













23 


38 


Masonic Grand Lodge of Illi¬ 
nois. 


1885 

Yes. 


8 

23 

19 

4 





Lake Bluff: 







62 


39 


Methodist Episcopal Church. 

Foundlings and orphan and 
homeless children. 

1894 

No. 

4 

4 

88 

46 

42 

14 



12 

Scranton Ave. 







Lake Villa: 








15 




1 



40 

Allendale Farm. 

Allendale Association. 

Dependent, friendless, and 
neglected boys. 

1897 

Yes. 

5 

17 

15 


5 

2 

7 


Lincoln: 









18 







41 

Odd Fellows’ Orphans’ Home of Illinois. 

Independent Order of Odd 

Mentally sound orphan chil- 

1893 

No. 

9 

26 

18 

10 

8 











Wyatt Ave. 

Fellows. 

dren of Odd Fellows. 














Lisle: 















42 


Bohemian Catholic churches. 

Orphan and dependent chil¬ 
dren from 3 to 14. 

1898 

No. 


6 

6 

2 

4 

4 



2 


1641 Allport St., Chicago (office). 












Maywood: 















43 

Central Baptist Orphanage. 

Private corporation (Baptist) 

Dependent chlidren. 

1895 

No. 


6 

76 

31 

45 


5 


71 


504 First Ave. * 
















44 


National Children’s Home 

Crippled, deformed, and dis¬ 
abled children. 

1908 

Yes. 

l 

2 

3 

2 

1 

2 


1 



902 South Eighth Ave. 

Society. 










Metamora: 












41 


45 

St. Mary’s Orphanage. 

Sisters of St. Francis. 

Orphan children 

1888 

No. 

( 2 ) 

1 

41 

31 

10 





Morgan Park: 









46 

Bacon Home for Missionaries’ Children.. 

American Baptist Foreign 
Mission Society. 

Missionaries’ children from 

7 to 18. 

1893 

No. 

l 

4 



















Morrison: 














47 

Mount Carmel Faith Home. 

Private corporation. 

Orphan and homeless chil¬ 
dren under 18. 

1900 

No. 











R. D. 5. 













Nachusa: 















48 

Naehnsa Lutheran Orphanage.. 

General Synod of the Luth¬ 
eran Church. 

Orphan children 

1904 

No. 


3 

2 

1 

1 




2 


Normal: 
















49 

Illinois Soldiers’ Orphans’ Home... 

State of Illinois. 

Soldiers’ and sailors' orphans 
and other dependent chil- 

1869 

Yes. 

5 

60 

56 

30 

26 


56 




Beech and Lincoln Sts. 







50 

Mason Deaconess Home and Baby Fold. 

Onarga: 

Methodist Episcopal Church 

dren. 

1905 

No. 

( 2 ) 

8 

26 

15 

11 




26 







51 

BetheLHome. 

Western Seamen’s Friend 

Defective children... 

1875 

Yes. 


2 

1 


1 

1 





Paris: 

Society. 















52 

Edgar County Children’s Home. 

Private corporation. 

Dependent children 

1898 

Yes. 


4 

18 

13 

5 

5 



13 


R. D. 1. 











Peoria: 















53 

Home for the Friendless. 

Woman’s Christian Home 

Orphan and deserted chil¬ 
dren. 

1875 

No. 


7 

io 42 

10 24 

io 18 

io 7 



i»35 


Knoxville Ave. 

Mission. 






54 

Lutheran Orphans’ Home. 

Lutheran Children's Friend 

Dependent and neglected 
children. 

1902 

No. 


4 

55 

24 

31 

39 


3 

13 


227 Malone Ave. 

Society. 







Quincy: 














55 

St. Aloysius’ Orphans’ Home. 

Private corporation. 

Orphan children... . 

1853 

No. 


4 

12 

4 

8 

3 



9 


Twentieth and Vine Sts. 











56 

Woodland Home for Orphans and 
Friendless. 

Private corporation. 

Orphan children under 12.. 

1850 

No. 


8 

50 

16 

34 




50 









2707 Maine St. 
















Rock Island: 















57 

Bethanv Home. 

Bethany Protective Associa¬ 
tion. 

Dependent and neglected 
children. 

1899 

No. 


6 

66 

33 

33 


66 




Thirty-sixth St. and Fifth Ave. 








Rockford: 















58 

Boys’ Club Association of Rockford.... 
204 South Madison St. 

Private corporation. 

Street bovs. 

1907 

Yes. 


4 

75 

75 


12 

32 


31 









59 

Children’s Home of Rockford. 

Private corporation. 

Dependent children. 

1906 

Yes. 

»3 

3 

9 

5 

4 

1 



8 


306 Sixth St. 











Springfield: 















60 

Orphanage of the Holy Child. 

Protestant Episcopal Church 

Orphan girls. 

1881 

No. 


2 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

* 220 East Adams St. 





61 

Springfield Home for the Friendless.... 
1300 South Seventh St. 

Private corporation. 

Orphan, dependent, and de¬ 
linquent children. 

1863 

No. 

( 2 ) 

9 

70 

36 

34 

1 



44 

25 






1 Indeterminate. ( * Includes receipts from care of inmates. 

2 Not reported. 8 Included in donations. 

3 Equipment. 7 Exclusive of cash balance. 

* Colored only. 8 Includes $25,000 Grand Lodge appropriations. 























































































































GENERAL TABLES 


99 


CARE OF CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


CHILDREN IN THE 
CLOSE OF 

INSTITUTION 

YEAR. 

AT 

CHILDREN 
OUTSIDE BUT 
UNDER 
SUPERVISION. 

CHILDREN 
PLACED IN 
FAMILIES 
DURING 
YEAR. 

CHILDREN 
DISCHARGED 
DURING YEAR. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Dependent. 

Working boys or girls. 

Delinquent. 

Orphans and 
foundlings. 

Invalid or defec¬ 
tive. 

All other. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

15 

15 






15 







2 

2 


10 

2 

8 

5 


5 



3 

1 

2 

3 

1 

2 

28 

11 

17 

98 

53 

45 

80 


18 











30 

15 

15 

30 





22 

12 

10 

11 

6 

5 

30 

16 

14 

163 

69 

94 

124 


39 









46 

24 

22 

105 

64 

41 

60 


45 









17 

10 

7 

67 

36 

31 

67 











10 

3 

7 

142 

83 

59 

112 


30 






29 

20 

9 

62 

35 

27 

62 

62 


28 


27 


7 







22 

22 


158 

88 

70 

158 











15 

7 

8 

28 

15 

* 

13 

28 





9 

3 

6 

4 


4 

2 


2 

107 

52 

55 

46 


9 61 



49 

26 

23 

11 

4 

7 

46 

22 

24 

6 

2 

4 


6 










2 

1 

1 

55 

41 

14 

55 











35 

25 

10 

17 

8 

9 



9 17 












26 

.10 

16 

18 


8 









2 


2 

22 

10 

12 

22 











2 

2 


314 

oc 

00 

rH 

126 

314 








5 

2 

3 




18 

11 

7 

18 








2 

2 


7 

2 

5 

15 

9 

6 

15 











1 


1 

44 

29 

15 



44 









18 

13 

5 

66 

48 

18 



66 






1 


1 




60 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

35 


25 



168 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

58 

28 

30 




27 

12 

15 

27 




16 

12 

4 

4 

2 

2 

8 

4 

4 

37 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

35 

2 




7 

6 

1 




10 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

41 

27 

14 


41 



43 

23 

20 

42 

22 

20 

1 


1 

387 

387 





375 

12 

500 

500 








18 

11 

7 

6 


12 

1 

1 


16 

5 

11 

3 

2 

1 

18 


18 

18 





( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

76 

56 

20 

76 





24 

8 

16 

14 81 

49 

32 

17 

11 

6 


9 Boarders. 

Estimated, 
ii Only one occupied. 


RECEIPTS 

DURING YEAR. 



Derived from— 

Total. 

Ap¬ 

pro- 

Dona- 

Care of 

Other 


p na¬ 
tions. 

tions. 

mates. 

sources 

$6,022 

$1,858 

$3,913 


$251 

3,696 


475 

$2,621 

600 

9,754 


7,489 

2,265 


6,506 

470 

3,243 

634 

2,159 

10,108 

1,512 

3,874 

3,448 

1,274 

11,066 


& 11,066 

(«) 


85,367 


85,367 


17,632 


11,874 

3,881 

1,877 

22,678 


17,308 

2,527 

2,843 

7 32,487 


8 28,184 


4,303 

72,769 


11,194 

1,049 

60,526 

7,366 


2,881 

3,758 

727 

1,870 


1,750 

120 


5,235 

326 

620 


4,289 

5,240 


2,065 

3,175 


1,000 


600 

400 

7,554 


7,494 

60 


78,576 

78,576 



2,709 

2,382 

327 


2,498 


2,498 



2,930 

1,175 

711 

382 

662 

8,550 

222 

2,148 

1,902 

4,278 

7,797 


5,047 


2,750 

2,311 

277 

150 

539 

1,345 

6,411 

117 

2,300 

1,108 

2,886 

4,694 


3,523 

1,171 


5,893 

300 

3,221 

891 

1,481 

4,163 

12 500 

1,443 

252 

13 1,968 

( s ) 

( s ) 

( j ) 

( j ) 

m 

8,928 

2,236 

2,093 

1,212 

3,387 


PAYMENTS DURING 
YEAR. 

Total. 

For 

run¬ 

ning 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

( 2 ) 

$3,199 

( s ) 

$1,117 

1,017 

$100 

9,579 

5,613 

3,966 

5,906 

5,906 


9,948 

9,948 


9,618 

5,796 

3,822 

63,997 

63,997 


17,683 

17,683 


21,086 

20,926 

160 

37,478 

29,380 

8,098 

24,782 

3,886 

20,896 

6,920 

5,497 

1,423 

1,850 

1,850 


5,360 

5,360 


5,240 

5,240 


1,200 

1,200 


7,194 

2,194 

5,000 

81,029 

69,953 

11,076 

2,312 

2,012 

300 

773 

773 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

5,785 

5,551 

234 

8,688 

5,188 

3,500 

2,275 

1,877 

398 

( 2 ) 

4,500 

c 2 ) 

7,254 

7,254 


5,893 

5,166 

727 

4,498 

3,666 

832 

( 2 ) 

( j ) 

( s ) 

9,595 

6,753 

2,842 


1 2 Exclusive of county board. 

1 3 Includes county board and bequests. 

h Includes those returned to friends and relatives. 


VALUE OF 
PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Total 

(includ¬ 

ing 

invested 

funds). 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

8 $200 

3 $200 

32 

35,000 

35,000 

33 

30,931 

29,400 

34 

29,500 

23,500 

35 

51,772 

51,772 

36 

37,670 

37,670 

37 

98,500 

98,500 

38 

60,500 

60,000 

39 

( 2 > 

51,904 

40 

214,923 

177,445 

41 

77,883 

29,896 

42 

44,000 

40,000 

43 

600 

600 

44 

50,225 

50,225 

45 

10,000 

10,000 

46 

6,000 

6,000 

47 

15,000 

15,000 

48 

360,000 

360,000 

« 

49 

10,000 

10,000 

50 

15,000 

15,000 

51 

18,000 

11,000 

52 

79,000 

25,000 

53 

14,563 

14,563 

54 

45,000 

25,000 

55 

67,000 

19,000 

56 

15,800 

15,800 

57 

16,500 

9,000 

58 

9,800 

9,800 

59 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 

60 

49,211 

6,200 

61 











































































































































































Institution number. 


100 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table I.— INSTITUTIONS FOR THE 


62 

63 

64 


1 

2 

> 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 

13 


14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 
21 

22 

23 


24 

25 

26 

27 

28 

29 








v! 

d 

CHILDREN RECEIVED 

FOR 

FIRST 










TIME IN 

1910. 






T3 


o 










> 

’© 

© 

© 

i 

© 

CO 

O 

© 




Through— 

NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of children received. 

►6 
© 

s 

© 

b 

3 

© 

d 

o 

© 

S-H 

O 

f~4 

d 

CO 

© 

© 

>> 

o 

fa 

a 



© 

CO 

3 

o 

e 

o 

© 

A 

** c 

. o 
o 

i2S 

bt> 

a 

at! 

J-l . 
O 73 

co-'S 

z « 

-H O 
4-P CO 

& 

© 

a 

© 

tuO 

d 




Vh 

© 

r© 

© 

• 


d 


d >_> 

T3 % 

tS "O 

u 




Sh 

d 

© 


B 

3 

*2 

d 

o 

© 

"d 

a 

© 

r© 

3 

S a 
£.5 

rzj w 
A 

— 0 

a».® 

© 

A 




£ 

O 

£ 

Ph 


a 

fa 

Ph 

O 

-■j 


o 

ILLINOIS—Continued. 















Urbana: 
















Woman’s Home Missionary 
Society, M. E. Church. 

Orphan girls, and boys un¬ 
der 8. 

1895 

Yes. 


7 

60 

25 

35 




60 


Cunningham Ave. 







Whitehall: 














Receiving Home 

Whitehall Orphans’ Home 
Society. 

Homeless and dependent 
children. 

1902 

No. 


13 

67 

28 

39 

67 













Woodstock: 







23 







Chicago Industrial Home for Children.. 

Free Methodist Church. 

Orphan, dependent, and 

1889 

Yes. 


6 

39 

16 

12 

13 

.... 

14 

.... 


homeless children. 













INDIANA. 















Anderson: 















Madison County Orphans’ Home 


Dependent and neglected 
children. 

1882 

No. 


4 

20 

7 

13 

20 





2515 Columbus Ave. 









Bluffton: 















Wells County Orphans’ Home.. 


Orphan and foundling chil¬ 
dren. 

1898 

No. 


2 

39 

25 

14 

39 





Boonville: 











Warrick County Orphans’ Home 


Orphan children.. 

1S96 

No. 


2 

12 

1 

8 

4 

12 





Bridgeport: 











Pentecost Orphanage.. 

Pentecost Band of the World. 

Foundling and orphan chil¬ 
dren. 

1903 

No. 



2 


2 




2 













Brookville: 















Franklin County Children’s Home.. 

County of Franklin. . 

Dependent children. 

18S8 

Yes. 


2 

5 

2 

3 

2 



3 


R. D. 7. 













Columbus: 















Frances Comfort Thomas Home 


Orphan and destitute chil¬ 
dren. 

1S92 

No. 


5 

18 

9 

9 




18 


127 Cherry St. 









Crawtordsville: 















Montgomery County Orphans’ Home.. 


Orphan and dependent chil¬ 
dren under 16. 

13S4 

Yes. 


1 

10 

7 

3 

10 













Evansville: 















Evansville Orphan Asylum. 


Orphan and dependent 
children. 

1866 

Yes. 3 


10 

5 

2 

3 

5 





West Indiana St. 











Receiving Home. 

Board of Children’s Guard- 

Neglected and dependent 
children. 

1900 

No. 


4 

28 

17 

11 

2 

24 


1 

1 

507 Lincoln Ave. 

ians. 









Fort Wayne: 















Allen County Orphan’s Home .. 

County of Allen . 

Abandoned and neglected 
children. 

1895 

Yes. 


7 

38 

22 

16 

38 





Bluffton Road. 








Fort Wayne Orphan Home. 

Reformed Church in U. S . 

Orphan children. 

1884 

No. 


10 

20 

10 

10 





20 

St. Vincent’s Orphan Asylum... 

Sisters, Poor Handmaids of 

Orphan and dependent girls 
from 2 to 14. 

1886 

Yes. 


14 

13 

13 

1 



12 

Wells St. and Archer Ave. 

Jesus Christ. 






Franklin: 















Johnson County Orphan Asylum. 

Countv of Johnson.. 

Orphan, dependent, neg¬ 
lected, and abandoned 

1SS4 

No. 

1 

2 

10 

6 

4 

10 
















children. 













Greencastle: 















Greeneastle Orphans’ Home. 

Private corporation. 

Orphan children. 

1895 

Yes. 


3 

10 

5 

5 




10 


Hadi.ey: 











Hadley Home 6 . 

Children’s Home Society of 
Indiana. 

Orphan and neglected chil¬ 
dren. 


























Indianapolis: 















Colored Orphans’ Home. 

Friends Church. 

Dependent and delinquent 
children. 

1S69 

Yes. 


10 

63 

28 

35 

63 





319 West Twenty-first St. 







German General Protestant Orphans’ 
Home. 

Private corporation. 

Orphan and delinquent chil¬ 
dren. 

1S67 

No. 


6 

8 

3 

5 


3 

i 

4 












1404 State Ave. 















German Lutheran Orphans’ Home. 

Synod of Missouri, Ohio, and 
Other States. 

German Lutheran orphan 
and destitute children. 

1883 

No. 


3 

3 

1 

2 




3 


3310 Washington St. 

Guardians’ Home. 










Board of Children’s Guard- 

Deserted and neglected chil¬ 
dren. 

18S9 

No. 


5 

35 

20 

15 


35 




5751 University Ave. 

ians. 







Indianapolis Orphans’ Asylum. 

Private corporation. 

Orphan and dependent chil¬ 
dren. 

1850 

No. 

2 

20 

154 

90 

64 

154 





4107East Washington St. 







St. Joseph’s Training School. 

Sisters of Providence. 

Orphan girls over 12. 

1S90 

No. 


1 

12 


12 





12 

725 South Alabama St. 










Jeffersonville: 















Jeffersonville Orphans’ Home. 

Private organization. 

Destitute children, and 

1876 

No. 


11 

2 

2 



2 




832 Meigs Ave. 

( 

boarders. 










Kniqhtstown: 















Indiana Soldiers’and Sailors’ Orphans’ 
Home. 

State of Indiana. 

Soldiers’ and Sailors’ de- 

1887 

Yes. 

6 

84 

61 

36 

25 




61 



pendent children and 
grandchildren. 














Knightsville: 















Clay County Orphans’ Home. 

County of Clay. 

Neglected children. 

1897 

No. 


3 

14 

( 1 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

14 





"Brazil, Ft. D. 8. 









Lafayette: 















St. Joseph’s Orphan Asylum. 

Sisters of St. Francis. 

Orphan, defective, delin¬ 
quent, and homeless boys. 

1869 

Yes. 


21 

15 

15 





15 










Tippecanoe County Children’s Home... 
Tenth St. 

Private corporation. 

Orphan and homeless chil- 

1887 

No. 


1 

25 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


(Iren. 



Lagrange: 















Rogers Orphans’ Home. 

County of Lagrange. 

Dependent children under 14. 

1871 

Yes. 


2 

3 

2 

1 

3 





Logansport:* 











Cass County Orphans’ Home. 

County of Cass. 

Orphan and abandoned chil¬ 
dren. 

1875 

No. 


4 

12 

3 

9 

12 





Pleasant Hill. 









Madison: 















Jefferson County Children’s Home. 

County of Jefferson. 

Neglected and orphan chil¬ 
dren. 

1883 

Yes. 


4 

4 

2 

2 




4 


707 East Main St. 













1 Included in report of Whitehall Orphans’ Home Society. « Owned by Vanderburg County. 

2 Not reported. 6 Included in report of Board of Children’s Guardians. 

3 Separate home under same supervision. 








































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


101 


CARE OF CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


CHIL 

c3 

O 

e 

DREI 

o3 

*03 

s 

* IN 
CLOS 

© 

*03 

a 

© 

P*4 

THE INSTITU ' 1 
E OF YEAR. 

Dependent. 

Working boys or girls. g 

Delinquent. h 

CHILDREN 
OUTSIDE BUT 
UNDER 
SUPERVISION. 

CHILDREN 
PLACED IN 
FAMILIES 
DURING 
YEAR. 

CHILDREN 
DISCHARGED 
DURING YEAR. 

Orphans and 
foundlings. 

Invalid or defec¬ 
tive. 

All other. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

50 

20 

30 

50 





5 

2 

3 

5 

2 

3 

22 

10 

12 

9 

4 

5 

9 





323 

181 

142 

106 

46 

60 

4 

1 

3 

23 

14 

9 

9 


14 



127 

71 

56 

51 

24 

27 

15 

12 

3 

40 

24 

16 

33 

1 

6 

V 


89 

40 

49 

51 

15 

36 

3 

1 

2 

26 

17 

9 

26 





25 

14 

11 

8 

4 

4 

1 

1 


4 

4 


4 





( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

8 

4 

4 




17 

9 

8 

17 








2 

2 


8 

2 

6 

8 








5 

2 

3 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

c 2 ) 

31 

15 

16 

23 


8 



85 

38 

47 

26 

10 

16 

24 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

24 




( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

32 

19 

13 

32 





92 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

18 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

31 

18 

13 


29 


2 

138 

59 

79 

33 

12 

21 

11 

6 

5 

63 

45 

18 



63 



( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

15 

7 

8 

5 

2 

3 

85 

43 

42 

85 








15 

7 

8 

106 

106 

si 


25 



15 


15 

15 


15 




12 

6 

6 


12 



22 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

12 

9 

3 




12 

4 

8 

r 

12 




20 

8 

12 

5 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 















68 

44 

24 

( s ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 




22 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

30 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

53 

27 

26 

50 

1 



2 

15 

13 

2 

4 

3 

1 

7 

4 

3 

48 

23 

25 

48 





21 

14 

7 




15 

5 

10 

59 

38 

21 

3 

56 



42 

25 

17 

42 

25 

17 

18 

8 

10 

143 

106 

37 

143 





2 

2 


83 

37 

46 

20 

14 

6 

24 

24 

24 











4 


4 

9 A 

90 

4 

17 


9 7 



27 

15 

12 







361 

206 

155 

297 


64 



12 

6 

6 

10 

3 

7 

87 

48 

39 

16 

11 

15 


16 






11 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

3 

1 

2 

100 

100 


90 

3 

4 


3 

5 

5 


5 

5 


13 

13 

.... 

39 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

14 

5 

9 

23 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

32 

22 

10 

5 


27 



5 

3 

2 

6 

1 

5 

2 

1 

1 

14 

6 

8 

8 

1 

5 



40 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

21 

8 

13 

6 

1 

5 

18 

11 

7 

15 

3 




34 

18 

16 

13 

8 

5 



















R 

Total. 

ECEIPTS 

DURING YEAR 

Derived from— 


PAYMENTS DURING 
YEAR. 

VALUE OF 
PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Ap- 

pro- 

pria- 

tions. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources 

Total. 

For 

run¬ 

ning 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total 

(includ¬ 

ing 

invested 

funds). 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

$10,438 


$10,438 



$10,438 

$ 6 , 763 

$3,675 

$47,120 

$47,120 

62 

0 ) 


(i) 


(i) 

(!) 

0 ) 

(!) 

(!) 

63 

11,288 

$205 

3,548 

$559 

*6,976 

11,288 

6,538 

4,750 

30,479 

25,729 

64 

5,100 



5,100 


5,564 

5,564 


12,000 

12,000 

1 

1,800 

1,800 



2,300 

1,800 

500 

15,000 

15,000 

2 

922 

922 




1,051 

1,051 


6,000 

6,000 

3 

2,500 


500 

200 

1,800 

2,500 

2,500 


30,000 

30,000 

4 

1,200 

1,200 




1,100 

1,100 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

5 

4,316 

3,721 



595 

3,729 

3,638 

91 

17,907 

17,907 

6 

2,752 

2,752 




2,938 

2,938 


15,000 

15,000 

7 

4,934 

4,095 


758 

81 

( 2 ) 

5,188 

( 2 ) 

4 30,360 

4 30,360 

8 

(5) 

( 6 ) 




( 5 ) 

( 5 ) 


( 5 ) 

( 6 ) 

9 

7,638 

7,638 




7,438 

7,438 


26,000 

26,000 

10 

13,600 

13,000 

600 


13,600 

10,600 

3,000 

100,000 

100,000 

11 

( 2 ) 


( s ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

(2) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

12 

2,150 

2,150 

2,150 

2,000 

150 

3,500 

3,500 

13 

4,000 




4,000 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

70,000 

10,000 

14 




15 

8,000 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

7,500 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

16,000 

15,000 

16 

30,624 


849 

961 

28,814 

29,447 

25,947 

3,500 

325,000 

185,000 

17 

7 4,561 


3,322 

200 

1,039 

7 3,823 

3,823 


7 74,000 

60,000 

18 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 


( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

19 






17,941 

9,852 

2,974 

4,294 

821 

17,235 

16,278 

957 

76,200 

75,000 

20 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

c 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

21 

2,687 

2,200 



487 

3,350 

3,350 


21,400 

17,500 

22 

107,142 

107,142 




107,142 

103,613 

3,529 

314,231 

314,231 

23 

2,200 

2,200 



» 

2,200 

2,200 

7,500 

7,500 

24 

9,731 

775 

454 

8,502 

11,933 

9,599 

2,334 

145,000 

105,000 

25 

2,933 

1,500 

800 

620 

13 

3,274 

3,134 

140 

9,600 

9,000 

26 

2 019 

2,019 




2,019 

2,019 


24,000 

24,000 

27 

2 875 

2 000 


102 

773 

2,875 

2,875 


( 2 ) 

15,000 

28 

2,348 

2,348 



2,34S 

2,220 

128 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

29 


«Included in report of Children’s Home Society of Indiana, Indianapolis. 8 Included in report of Marion County Board of Children’s Guardians. 

7 Includes report of German Lutheran Orphans’ Association. 9 Includes 3 boarders. 































































































































































Institution number. 


102 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table I.— INSTITUTIONS FOR THE 


30 

31 

32 

33 

34 

35 

36 

37 

38 

39 

40 

41 

42 

43 


44 

45 

46 

47 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 


13 








c3 

children received 

FOR 

FIRST 





*6 


© 

O 



TIME IN 

1910. 






© 

> 

’© 

o 

© 

<Z) 

© 

© 

V3 

'o 




Through— 

NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of children received. 


fl 

© 

03 

-4-J 

a 

$ 




CO 

© 

bJO 

tH . 
O 





'd 

© 

fl 

3 

£ 

rfl 

3 

o 

O 

o 

o 

u 

© 

© 

>> 

o 

Ph 

a 



© 

.3 

o 

s 

o 

o 

d 

<+-> O 
O '43 

J2;S 

•f-H 

« CO 
c3© 

P © 

co-'fl 

®-s 

r* im 
■-H O 

-+-P GO 

cU'fl 

r— fl 
©.2 

.2 

*o 

fl 

© 

to 

a 




S-I 

o3 

© 

h 

O 

s 

3 

2 

3 

o 

© 

a 

E 

© 

3 

fl 

O § 

S-S 

2 s 

ja 

© 

rfl 

4-> 





o 

2 

Ph 

Ph 

a 


Ph 

o 

o 


o 

IN DIANA—Continued. 















Marion: 











30 






Dependent and homeless 
children. 

1887 

Yes., 


7 

36 

19 

17 













Muncie: 










34 



18 




Dependent and neglected 
children. 

1883 

Yes. 


7 

52 

30 

22 




Yorktown Pike. 










New Albany: 

















Orphan and friendless chil¬ 
dren. 

1873 

No. 


3 

28 

22 

6 

28 





Ekin Ave. 









Newport: 















Collp.t.t. Horn a for Orphans . 


County orphan children 

1893 

Yes. 


2 

1 


1 




1 


Patoka: 











French Orphans* Home_ 

County of Gibson. 

Abandoned children. . . . 

18S2 

No. 


0) 

11 

7 

4 

11 





Petersburg:* 











Thornton Orphans’ Home_ 


Dependent children 

1892 

No. 


3 

4 

3 

1 

4 





Plymouth: 












Julia E. Work Training School.. 


Dependent and delinquent 
children. 

1899 

Yes. 

5 

13 

84 

43 

41 

84 












Richmond: 















Wernle Orphans’ Home . 

Lutheran Joint Synod of 
Ohio and Other States. 

Lutheran orphan children 
from 2 to 12. 

1878 

No. 


7 

14 

9 

5 




1 

13 









Rockport: 













10 


Veatch Orphans’ Home . 

County of Spencer _ 

Orphan .neglected,and aban¬ 
doned children. 

1899 

No. 


i 

11 

5 

6 

1 














Shelbyville: 















Gordon Children’s Home. 

County of Shelby. 

Dependent and neglected 
children. 

1891 

No. 


5 

22 

10 

12 

22 





R. D. 12. 








Spiceland: 















Henry and Rush County Orphans’ 

Counties of Henry and Rush. 

Orphan, neglected, or de- 

(>) 

No. 


0) 

8 

4 

4 

8 










Home. 


pendent children. 












Terre Haute: 






* 








Rose Orphan Home. 

Private corporation. 

Dependent orphans between 

3 and 13. 

1884 

No. 

3 

15 

28 

15 

13 




28 


Twenty-fifth St. and Wabash Ave. 
St. Ann’s Orphanage. 








Sisters of Providence. 

Dependent Catholic girls 
from 3 to 12. 

1848 

No. 


2 

40 


40 




40 


Thirteenth St. and Fifth Ave. 









Vigo County Home for Dependent Chil- 

Board of Children’s Guard- 

Orphan and dependent chil- 

1903 

Yes. 

3 

a 

139 

85 

54 

51 

47 

. . . . 

32 

9 

dren. 

ians. 

dren. 













R. D. 5. 















Vincennes: 















Knox County Orphans’ Home. 

County of Knox. 

Orphan and dependent chil¬ 
dren. 

1892 

No. 


6 

27 

14 

13 

27 





1620 Fairground Ave. 








St. Vincent’s Orphan Asylum. 

Sisters of Providence. 

Dependent boys from 3 to 12. 

1851 

No. 


7 

39 

39 



39 




R.D.4. 









Wabash: 















White’s Indiana Manual Labor Institute 

Society of Friends . 

Dependent and wayward 
children. 

1852 

Yes. 

3 

15 

92 

62 

30 

84 



8 







Winchester: 















James Moorman Orphans’ Home. 

Private corporation. 

Orphan and indigent chil¬ 
dren. 

1889 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

(>) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

IOWA. 


Beloit: 















United Norwegian Lutheran Orphans’ 
Home. 

United Norwegian Lutheran 
Church. 

Orphan, homeless, and neg¬ 
lected children. 

1890 

No. 

4 

17 

19 

11 

8 




19 








Boone: 















Children’s Christian Training Home. ... 
906 West Second St. 

Christian Missionary Alli¬ 
ance. 

Orphan and homeless chil¬ 
dren. 

1908 

Yes. 


5 

29 

15 

14 




29 








Cedar Rapids: 















Home for the Friendless . 

Private corporation . 

Homeless children . 

1884 

Yes. 


8 

30 

0) 

(') 




30 


519 North Fifteenth St. 








Council Bluffs: 















Christian Home . 

Private corporation . 

Homeless children under 16. 

1883 

No. 


5 

125 

0) 

(>) 




125 


Davenport: 








Iowa Soldiers’ Orphans’ Home . 

State of Iowa . 

Soldiers’ and other orphan 
and dependent children. 

1862 

Yes. 

18 

87 

183 

103 

SO 

94 



89 


2800 Eastern Ave. 





St. Vincent’s Home. 

Sisters of the Holy Humility 
of Mary. 

Orphan and destitute chil- 

1896 

No. 


1 

27 

17 

10 

11 



16 


Gaines St. 

ctren. 





Des Moines: 

* 













Des Moines Home for Friendless Chil- 

Private corporation. 

Orphan and homeless chil¬ 
dren. 

1886 

No. 


7 

45 

20 

25 




45 


dren. 








2018 High St. 















Iowa Children’s Home. 

Iowa Children’s Home Soci- 

Orphan, dependent, and de¬ 
linquent children. 

1888 

Yes. 


22 

206 

109 

97 

68 

3 

2 

103 

30 

2340 East Ninth St. 

ety. 




Polk County Juvenile Home. 

County of Polk. 

Dependent, neglected, and 
delinquent children. 

1909 

Yes. 


2 

69 

37 

32 

69 





Fifteenth St. and Hull Ave. 








Dubuque: 














St. Mary’s Orphan Home. 

Sisters of St. Francis. 

Orphan and destitute 
children. 

1878 

No. 


5 

54 

34 

20 

1 



53 


Davis Lane. 







Elk Horn: 















Elim Orphans’ Home. 

United Danish Lutheran 

Danish orphan children. 

1890 

No. 


3 

4 

2 

2 

1 



3 



Church. 











Fort Dodge: 















Lutheran Orphanage. 

Synod of Missouri, Ohio, 
and Other States. 

Orphan, friendless, and 
neglected children. 

1901 

No. 


3 

19 

8 

ii 


2 

12 

£ 


Eighteenth StT and Sixth Ave., 






south. 














Ottumwa: 















Receiving Home. 

American Home Finding 
Association. 

Homeless and friendless 

1899 

Yes. 


15 

127 

67 

1 

60 

43 

43 


41 


507 West Fourth St. 

children. 





i Not reported. 


2 Equipment. 










































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


103 


CARE OF CHILDREN: 1910 —Continued. 


CHILDREN IN THE 
CLOSE OF 

INSTITUTION 

YEAR. 

AT 

CHILDREN 
OUTSIDE BUT 
UNDER 
SUPERVISION. 

CHILDREN 
PLACED IN 
FAMILIES 
DURING 
YEAR. 

CHILDREN 
DISCHARGED 
DURING YEAR. 

RECEIPTS 

DURING YEAR. 


PAYMENTS DURING 
YEAR. 

VALUE OF 
PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

*3 

o 

H 

© 

a 

© 

c3 

a 

© 

Dependent. 

CO 

72 

*So 

u 

o 

CO 

>> 

o 

rO 

W) 

a 

3 

M 

O 

£ 

a 

© 

D 

o* 

.a 

*© 

A 

Total. 

Derived from— 

•d 

co d 
fl — 

C. o 

O 

o 

| 

© 

Sg 

2’S 

> 

a 

H-t 

*2 

© 

o 

13 

o 

Eh 

© 

13 

a 

© 

13 

a 

© 

3 

o 

Eh 

© 

a 

© 

a 

© 

&-i 

c3 

O 

Eh 

© 

a 

% • 

.2 

a 

© 

Ph 

Ap- 

pro- 

pria- 

tions. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources 

Total. 

For 

run¬ 

ning 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total 

(includ¬ 

ing 

invested 

funds). 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

95 

42 

53 

11 

2 

82 



57 

32 

25 

57 

32 

25 

1 


1 

$10,054 

$9,426 

$41 


$587 

$6,483 

$6,283 

$200 

$21,500 

$21,500 

45 

30 

15 

30 


15 



125 

75 

50 

87 

57 

30 




4,289 

3 895 

25 

$307 

62 

4,078 

4,078 

25,000 

25,000 

15 

12 

3 

14 




1 




3 

2 

1 

16 

13 

3 

2,583 

2,313 

25 

245 

2,763 

2,473 

290 

22,000 

15,000 

11 

4 

7 

11 














3,500 



3,500 

3,000 

2,000 

1,000 

85,000 

25,000 

14 

9 

5 

10 

2 

2 



(i) 

0) 

0) 

6 

5 

1 

C 1 ) 

0) 

c i ) 

3,198 

3,198 



3,198 

3,198 


5,000 

5,000 

30 

25 

5 

24 

1 

5 



30 

21 

9 

12 

12 


3,382 

3,382 




3,235 

3,235 


2 800 

2 800 

200 

106 

94 



98 


102 







34 

25 

9 

20,850 

20,850 




18,932 

16,932 

2,000 

80,000 

80,000 

75 

42 

33 

75 





6 

4 

2 

2 

2 


1 

1 


7,200 

6,000 

520 

6S0 

7,200 

7,200 

74,000 

59,000 

24 

10 

14 

11 


13 



20 

9 

11 

9 

4 

5 




2,337 

2,250 


87 

2,500 

2,061 

439 

2,400 

2,400 

25 

13 

12 

22 


3 









35 

23 

12 

3,112 

3,112 




3,112 

3,112 


10,000 

10,000 

32 

25 

7 

16 

1 

15 



(■) 

(*> 

(>) 

c i ) 

o) 

( i ) 

0) 

C 1 ) 

C 1 ) 

o) 

(>) 

( i ) 

/ 

0) 

0) 

( i ) 

( i ) 

c 1 ) 

(>) 

8,300 

86 

55 

31 

86 

/ 




259 

153 

106 

61 

26 

35 




21,160 




21,160 

17,586 

16,289 

1,297 

618,236 

264,295 

76 


76 

46 


30 











2,700 

2,700 




2,700 

2,700 


50,000 

50,000 

99 

66 

33 

32 

6 

57 


4 

450 

250 

200 

47 

28 

19 

83 

51 

32 

11,704 

11,704 




11,704 

11,000 

704 

60,000 

60,000 

46 

28 

18 

46 











63 

27 

36 

6,181 

6,181 




6,181 

6,181 


20,000 

20,000 

91 

91 


77 


14 






2 

2 


22 

22 


6,383 


4,583 

275 

1,525 

6,383 

5,636 

747 

40,000 

40,000 

146 

104 

42 

73 




73 







30 

20 

10 

23,137 


14,924 

8,213 

23,067 

19,531 

3,536 

95,000 

75,000 

( i ) 

0) 

0) 

0) 


( i ) 

C) 

(■) 

( i ) 

(>) 

(>) 

(>) 

(>) 

o) 

0) 

C 1 ) 

C 1 ) 

« 

( i ) 

(») 

( 1 ) 

o) 

« 

0) 

C 1 ) 

« 

o) 

C 1 ) 

157 

94 

63 

157 











22 

14 

8 

21,922 


14,070 


7,852 

21,452 

16,690 

4,762 

90,075 

81,173 

16 

10 

6 

12 


4 









27 

14 

13 

2,895 


17 

1,184 

1,694 

2,911 

1,846 

1,065 

4,600 

4,600 

31 

16 

15 



31 









G) 

0) 

G) 

5,432 

2,644 

1,400 

1,021 

367 

6,423 

4,858 

1,565 

35,000 

20,000 

209 

m 

m 



202 



(i)* 

(i) 

G) 

48 

C 1 ) 

(i) 

103 

G) 

G) 

65,416 

65,416 



71,387 

71,387 

262,000 

262,000 


\ ) 

337 

\ ) 

248 

9 98 

3 

284 



102 

49 

53 

91 

46 

45 

46 

22 

24 

84,692 

84,192 

500 



95,734 

88,694 

7,040 

380,538 

380,538 

142 

90 

52 

2 


140 











8,035 

792 

646 

2,812 

3,785 

7,892 

7,282 

610 

40,000 

40,000 

50 

m 

m 

50 





(i) 

0) 

C 1 ) 

( 1 ) 

0) 

G) 

(!) 

G) 

G) 

6,955 


1,891 

5,064 

G) 

G) 

G) 

16,500 

11,500 

27 

^ / 

21 

\ ) 

6 

11 


16 



2,274 

1,114 

1,160 

396 

188 

208 

14 

8 

6 

( 8 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( s ) 

( 3 ) 

c 


3 

2 


6 







64 

34 

30 

11,495 

11,290 



205 

6,289 

6,289 


15,000 

10,000 

1AQ 

108 

61 

' 102 


67 









79 

39 

40 

12,586 

1,128 

915 


10,543 

10,555 

10,555 


91,000 

75,000 

4 

2 

2 

4 










2 

1 

1 

2,288 


1,328 

199 

761 

2,288 

2,188 

100 

8,000 

8,000 

i 

i 




1 



21 

12 

9 

24 

10 

14 

1 

1 


3,446 


3,250 


196 

3,388 

2,413 

975 

9,475 

9,100 

22 

12 

10 



22 



49 

27 

22 

146 

75 

71 

1 


1 

m 

o> 

(<) 

« 


o) 


(<) 

0) 

( 4 > 


a Included in report of Iowa Children’s Home Society. 4 Included in report of the American Home Finding Association. 


© 

■Q 

a 

a 

a 

o 


30 

31 

32 

33 

34 

35 

36 

37 

38 

39 

40 

41 

42 

43 

44 

45 

46 

47 

1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 

13 





































































































































































Institution number. 


104 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table I.— INSTITUTIONS FOR THE 


14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 


7 

8 

9 

10 

11 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


IOW A—Continued. 

Sioux City: 

Boys’ and Girls’ Home. 

Twenty-sixth and Douglas Sts. 

St. Anthony’s Home. 

Twenty-fourth and Ross Sts. 
Stanton: 

Swedish Lutheran Orphans’ Home_ 

Tabor: 

Children’s Home. 

Waverly: 

Iowa Lutheran Orphans’ Home. 

KANSAS. 

Atchison: 

State Orphans’ Home.. 

Chanute: 

Children’s Home.. 

1215 South Central Ave. 

Cleburne: 

Lutheran Orphans’ Home.. 

Fort Scott: 

Goodlander Home.. 

105 Blair Ave. 

Holiness Industrial Children’s Home... 
Franklin St. 

Hillsboro: 

Industrial School and Hygiene Home 
for the Friendless. 

Iola: 

Children’s Home. 

606 South Fourth St. 

Kansas City: 

Children’s Home. 

Eighth St. and State Ave. 

Orphan Children’s Home. 

852 Washington Boulevard. 
Leavenworth: 

Colored Orphan Asylum. 

R. D. 6 

St. Vincent’s Orphan Asylum. 

Limit St. 

Topeka: 

Topeka Orphans’ Home. 

234 Fillmore St. 

Wichita: 

Helen Gould Orphan Children’s Home. 

1447 River St. 

St. Joseph’s Orphanage. 

1400 South Hillside Ave. 

Wichita Children’s Home. 

3855 East First St. 

Winfield: 

Lutheran Home for Friendless Children 
411 Park Ave. 

KENTUCKY. 

Bardstown: 

St. Thomas’ Orphan Asylum.. 

Clay City: 

Highland Orphans’ Home.. 

Cold Spring: 

St. Joseph’s Orphanage.. 

Covington: 

Covington Protestant Children’s Home, 
1407 Madison Ave. 

St. John’s German Orphan Asylum_ 

Horsebranch Road, R. D. 
Frankfort: 

Mary K. Williams Home for Orphan 
Girls. 

Washington St. 

Lexington: 

Children’s Home. 

Fifth and Upper Sts. 

Lexington Orphan Asylum. 

511 West Short St. 

Louisville: 

Children’s Home. 

2630 Montgomery St. 

Colored Orphans’ Home. 

Eighteenth and Dumisnil Sts. 

German Baptist Orphans’ Home. 

923 Cherokee Road. 

i Not 


Supervised or conducted by- 


Private corporation. 

Sisters of St. Francis. 

Augustana Synod. 

Hephzibah Faith Missionary 
Association. 

Private corporation. 

State of Kansas. 

Chanute Benevolent Society. 

Augustana Synod. 

Private corporation. 

Church of God. 

Crimean Mennonite Brethren 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Oblate Sisters of Providence 
Sisters of Charity. 

Private corporation. 

Private organization. 

Sisters of St. Joseph. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation (Luth¬ 
eran). 


Sisters of Charity of Nazareth 

Presbyterian Church in U. S. 
St. Boniface’s Society. 

Private corporation. 

St. John’s Orphan Society.. 

Ascension Protestant Epis¬ 
copal Church. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Church of Christ. 

Orphans’ Home Society. 

Southern German Baptist 
churches. 

reported. 


Class of children received. 


Neglected children under 16. 

Homeless and neglected 
children from 2 to 14. 

Orphan and destitute 
Swedish children. 

Homeless and friendless 
children. 

Orphan and destitute 
children. 

Dependent children. 

Orphan children. 

Destitute orphan children... 

Destitute children. 

Orphan, destitute, and de¬ 
serted children. 

Orphan, homeless, and des¬ 
titute children. 

Orphan, dependent, and 
neglected children. 

Orphan, abandoned, and 
neglected children. 

Orphan and destitute 
children. 

Homeless and destitute 
children. 

Orphan children. 

Orphan children under 12... 

Orphan children. 

Orphan, abandoned, and 
destitute girls. 

Orphan, abandoned, and 
neglected children. 

Orphan, homeless, and 
abandoned children. 


Orphan and destitute 
children. 


Orphan children 3 . 


Roman Catholic children 
from 2 to 17. 

Destitute children. 

German orphan children.... 


Orphan girls. 


Illegitimate, abandoned, and 
neglected children. 

Orphan children. 


0) 

Orphan children. 


Orphan and destitute chil¬ 
dren. 


*o 

■o 

a 

3 

£ 

o 

s* 


1894 

1910 

1881 

1892 

1863 

1887 
1906 

1880 

1891 

1903 

1889 

1903 

1900 

1901 

1889 

1866 

1888 

1S99 

1894 

1888 

1902 


1858 

1908 

1877 

1882 

1S50 

1898 

1889 

1833 

( l ) 

1878 

1871 


•a 

> 


§ 

3 

o 

•a 

t. 

_o 

"3 

o 


Yes. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

Yes. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

Yes. 

No. 

No. 

( 2 ) 

Yes. 

No. 

No. 

( 2 ) 

No. 

No. 

No. 


0) 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

0) 

Yes. 

No. 


0) 


0) 

0) 


o 
a> 
co 
_o 
o 
—• 
03 
to 
o 
<D 

P>> 

O 

Ph 

a 

® 

2 

3 

P, 


50 

1 

6 

3 

2 

6 

2 

6 

2 


(>) 

3 

11 

7 

10 


0) 

s 

(>) 

(0 


CHILDREN RECEIVED FOR FIRST 
TIME IN 1910. 


2 

o 

f- 


129 

81 


11 

24 

86 

14 

12 

129 

13 

3 

42 

58 

49 

35 

73 

108 

2 

21 

39 

31 


(*) 

24 

12 

55 

15 


44 

23 

<*) 

O) 


( l ) 

54 


3 

12 

49 
8 

6 

66 

8 

1 

20 

32 

19 

20 
39 

50 
2 

20 

18 

0) 

12 

7 

33 
12 


31 

8 

0) 

0) 


0) 

27 


8 

12 

37 

6 

6 

63 

5 

2 

22 

26 

30 

15 

34 

58 

21 

13 

13 


0) 

12 

5 

22 

3 


13 

15 

0) 

(») 


Through— 

Public officials. 

Officials of the 

institution. 

Child-placing 

societies. 

Relatives or 

friends of child. 

Other agencies. 

33 

53 


43 


8 

.... 

5 

68 

.... 




11 





24 


86 







14 





12 


30 



99 




13 





3 





42 


2 



56 


10 



39 




35 





73 


.... 

4 

.... 

104 

.... 

2 








21 





39 


12 

1 

.... 

18 

.... 

0) 

(») 

0) 

0) 

24 

0) 


12 




55 




3 

12 






2 

1 

31 

13 




23 




C 1 ) 

0) 

0) 

« 

(») 

(>) 

C 1 ) 

0) 

(>) 

C 1 ) 







2 Colored only. 






























































































































GENERAL TABLES 


105 


CARE OF CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


CHILDREN IN THE 
CLOSE OF 

INSTITUTION 

YEAR. 

AT 

4 

CHILDREN 
OUTSIDE BUT 
UNDER 
SUPERVISION. 

CHILDREN 
PLACED IN 
FAMILIES 
DURING 
YEAR. 

CHILDREN 
DISCHARGED 
DURING YEAR. 

RECEIPTS 

DURING YEAR. 


PAYMENTS DURING 
YEAR. 

VALUE OF 
PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

3 

o 

H 

JV 

s 

£ 

a 

© 

Dependent. 

s 

be 

M 

O 

CO 

o 

.fi 

bo 

.3 

o 

£ 

a 

© 

3 

CT* 

.s 

2 

A 

Total. 

Derived from— 

a . 

03 w 
U 

«.g 

03 ^ 

& o 

O 

1 

© 

2*43 

2 

> 

5 

© 

.a 

o 

2 

-*-3 

o 

H 

© 

2 

a 

© 

2 

a 

© 

Ph 

2 

+-> 

o 

H 

2 

a 

© 

2 

a 

© 

3 

o 

H 

© 

2 

£ 

© 

2 

a 

© 

Ap- 

pro- 

pria- 

tions. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources 

Total. 

For 

run¬ 

ning 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total 

(includ¬ 

ing 

invested 

funds). 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

35 

(') 

(>) 

(>) 

G) 

( i ) 


(>) 

19 

(>) 

0) 

16 

( l ) 

0) 

104 

G ) 

G) 

$10,207 

$4,130 


$740 

$5,337 

$10,207 

$8,189 

$2,018 

$39,000 

$28,500 

14 

81 

54 

27 



64 

17 











2,650 

550 

$1,800 

300 


2,500 

1,900 

600 

50,000 

50,000 

15 

35 

19 

16 

35 





3 

i 

2 




5 

3 

2 

5,973 


1,661 

160 

4,152 

5,973 

5,473 

500 

51,961 

51,961 

16 

25 

9 

16 

19 


6 



4 

i 

3 




2 

1 

1 

514 


372 


142 

518 

494 

24 

3,000 

3,000 

17 

77 

46 

31 

58 


19 



12 

ii 

1 

12 

11 

1 

6 

5 

1 

12,607 

• 

7,205 


5,402 

9,618 

9,109 

509 

45,850 

45,850 

18 

198 

145 

53 

24 

4 

170 



281 

155 

126 

95 

47 

48 

28 

15 

13 

40,803 

39,700 


1,103 

41,769 

39,045 

2,724 

300,000 

300,000 

1 

6 

4 

2 



6 






1 


1 

7 

4 

3 

526 

93 

230 

203 

713 

395 

318 

2,750 

2,500 

2 

32 

18 

14 

24 

2 

6 









4 

1 

3 

4,000 

500 

1,800 

275 

1,425 

* 4,000 

3,200 

800 

40,000 

40,000 

3 

17 

10 

7 

17 














1,545 

400 

711 

434 


1,483 

1,160 

323 

3,800 

3,800 

4 

17 

11 

6 

14 


3 



3 

2 

1 

4 

3 

1 

5 

3 

2 

843 


843 



795 

587 

208 

3,000 

3,000 

5 

9 

5 

4 

9 





5 

5 


3 

3 


2 

2 


2,814 

500 

613 

1,195 

506 

2,740 

2,740 


20,000 

20,000 

6 

0 ) 

C 1 ) 

(!) 

0) 

G) 

o 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

( i ) 

3 


3 

( l ) 

( l ) 

( i ) 

1,712 

600 

138 

974 


1,256 

1,256 


( i ) 

C 1 ) 

7 

27 

13 

14 

27 

72 

38 

34 

6 

1 

5 

33 

( l ) 

0) 

3,419 

1,168 

949 

514 

788 

3,122 

3,122 


13,354 

12,000 

8 

60 

25 

35 

41 

.... 

12 

.... 

7 

1 


1 

6 


6 

G) 

G) 

G) 

850 

170 

192 

365 

123 

864 

699 

165 

2,500 

2,500 

9 

92 

65 

27 

92 





3 

3 


6 

6 


C 1 ) 

0) 

0) 

8,800 

500 

2,000 

300 

6,000 

8,800 

6,000 

2,800 

50,000 

50,000 

10 

99 

51 

48 

98 

1 










(1) 

(!) 

(1) 

7,884 

500 

700 


6,684 

7,884 

7,884 


(}) 

0) 

11 

12 S 

60 

68 

128 





56 

25 

31 




48 

23 

25 

1,455 

860 

132 

250 

213 

1,317 

924 

393 

9,800 

7,000 

12 

5 

c i ) 

( l ) 

2 




3 

20 

11 

9 

20 

11 

9 




230 

180 



50 

230 

230 




13 

25 

25 

25 





5 

5 

10 


10 

11 


11 

1,400 

820 

448 

132 


1,400 

1,090 

310 

35,000 

35,000 

14 

45 

27 

18 

21 

2 

22 



( i ) 

0) 


0) 

0) 

( l ) 

43 

23 

20 

4,490 

1,300 

233 

1,900 

1,057 

4,373 

4,373 


15,000 

15,000 

15 

15 

9 

6 

7 

2 

6 



165 

81 

84 

24 

16 

8 

12 

3 

9 

3,171 


1,363 

171 

1,637 

3,743 

3,232 

511 

6,000 

6,000 

16 

G) 

(>) 

( i ) 

G) 

o 

( i ) 

(*) 

0) 

( i ) 

(>) 

G) 

o 

0) 

(*) 

% 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

1 

24 

12 

12 

24 











5 

3 

2 

0) 


500 


0) 

2,000 

500 

1,500 

8,000 

8,000 

2 

105 

65 

40 

105 








4 

2 

2 

15 

9 

6 

7,529 


644 

1,595 

5,290 

7,118 

6,220 

898 

35,000 

35,000 

3 


21 

15 



36 



m 

m 

m 

( i ) 

(*) 

G) 

52 

34 

18 

4,500 


2,913 


1,587 

5,000 

5,000 


100,000 

65,000 

4 

65 

36 

29 

61 


4 



\ / 

6 

V / 

4 

V / 

2 

6 

1 

5 

6,903 


276 


6,627 

11,940 

6,004 

5,936 

70,841 

50,000 

5 

Q 

3 

3 








0) 


(1) 

3 


3 

1,200 




1,200 

1,100 

1,100 


20,000 


6 

44 

30 

14 

20 


24 






8 

1 

7 

15 

11 

4 

4,555 

3,500 

80 

925 

50 

4,989 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

7 

23 

8 

15 

0) 











0) 

0) 

( l ) 

3,530 

900 

67 

103 

2,460 

2,990 

2,766 

224 

52,000 

12,000 

% 

o 

G) 

o) 

c i ) 

(o 

G) 

0) 

0) 

(*) 

o 

(*) 

(>) 

(*) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

9 

(■) 

G) 

<?) 

g) 

o) 

G) 

0) 

0) 

(>) 

0) 

(*) 

c) 

o) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) . 

G) 

G) 

G) 

10 

12 

7 

5 

12 





73 

36 

37 

73 

36 

37 




4,222 


3,622 

150 

450 

3,430 

3,430 


20,000 

10,00 C 

11 
























* From the mountains exclusively. 





































































































































































































106 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table I.— INSTITUTIONS FOR THE 









u 

c3 

CHILDREN RECEIVED 

FOR 

• 

FIRST 








>> 

*0 



TIME IN 1910. 



2 





*© 

O 

© 

co 
© 
W> 

-*-> 

4-3 

O 

O 

O 

Ut 

© 

rO 

© 

eo 

O 

O 

4-» 




Through— 

a 

p 

a 

0 

0 

w 

P 

NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of children received. 

'd 

© 

3 

O 

«*-. 

0 

© 

Sh 

2 

2 

0 

© 

c3 

co 

© 

© 

>> 

O 

ft 

a 

© 



2 

2 

2 

’0 

2 

0 

_o 

0 

H . 
~ O 
O 
0 33 

i| 

tuO 

0 

Sjj 

ft© 

u 

O 

co 

®-s 

r* «—• 

—• O 
-+-> to 
c3 T? 

i 

a 

0 

© 

fcjo 

03 

u, 

•4_> 

GO 




c3 

© 

JO 

a 

0 

2 

C3 

4-J 

O 

© 

a 

3 

a 

0 w 

e-s 

rz: co 
A 

—. c 

<D # ® 

© 

A 

►H 





0 

£ 

Ph 

EH 

s 

fa 

Ph 

0 

0 


O 


KENTUCKY—Continued. 
















Louisville—C ontinued. 















12 

German Protestant Orphans’ Home.... 
1232 Bardstown Road. 


Orphan and destitute chil¬ 
dren. 

1851 

No. 


6 

14 


7 




14 


13 











Home of the Innocents... 

Protestant Episcopal Church 

Homeless and indigent chil¬ 
dren. 

1875 

No. 


10 

20 

6 

14 

10 



10 


14 

106 West Broadway. 



22 




Kentucky Home for Colored Children 1 . 

Kentucky Home Society for 

Destitute and neglected chil- 

1908 

Yes. 


4 

31 

16 

15 

2 

.... 

7 

.... 

15 

807 Sixth St. 

Colored Children. 

dren. 











29 


Louisville Baptist Orphans’ Home 

Baptist churches of Ken¬ 
tucky. 

Methodist Episcopal Church, 
South. 


1869 

No. 


17 

34 

13 

21 

5 




16 

1022 South First St. 







19 


Methodist Orphans’ Home. 

Orphan children from 21 to 
13. 

18?1 

No. 


5 

19 

12 

7 .... 





812 South Fifth St. 








17 

Orphange of the Good Shepherd 

Protestant Episcopal Church 


1S69 

No. 


4 

4 

4 





2 

2 


1418"Morton Ave. 










17 


18 

Orphans’ Home. 

Christian Church (Disciples). 

Orphan children from 2 to 
12. 

1872 

No. 


7 

17 

7 

10 





19 

225 East College St. 








13 


Presbyterian Orphans’ Home. . 

Presbyterian Orphans’ 
Home Society. 

Dependent children. 

1855 

No. 


2 

14 

6 

8 

1 




20 

1118 South Preston St. 










Protestant Episcopal Orphan Asylum.. 
211 East College St. 

Protestant Episcopal Church 


1836 

No. 


3 

6 


6 .... 



4 

2 

21 











Receiving Home 3 

Kentucky Children’s Home 
Society. 

Dependent, neglected, and 
homeless children. 

1895 

No. 


37 

146 

78 

68 

146 





22 

1086 Baxter Ave. 


16 




St. Joseph’s Orphans’ Home 


Catholic orphan and desti¬ 
tute children. 

1849 

No. 


21 

29 

16 

13 

13 




23 

Frankfort and Bayley Aves. 





9 

1 

Orphan and dependent girls. 

1832 

No. 


10 


10 


2120 Payne St. 










Newport: 













6 


24 

Campbell County Protestant Orphans’ 
Home. 


Orphan children from 3 to 
18. 

1884 

No. 


4 

6 

4 

2 

















Home Ave. 
















Versailles: 













( 2 ) 


25 

Cleveland Orphan Institution . 

Private corporation . 

Orphan girls. 

1875 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


LOUISIANA. 





Baton Rougjs: 















1 

Protestant Orphans’ Home . 

Private organization .. 

Orphan and destitute girls. . 

1842 

No. 


1 

5 


5 




5 



1219 Main St. 












2 

St. Joseph’s Orphan.Asylum. 

Sisters of St. Joseph .. 

Destitute orphan girls. .. 

1868 

No. 


4 

4 


4 




4 



FifFh and Florida Sts. 














Lake Charles: 















3 

Louisiana Baptist Orphanage.. 

Missionary Baptists of Lou¬ 
isiana. 

Orphan children... 

1903 

No. 


6 

52 

30 

22 

52 















New Orleans: 















4 

Children’s Home. 

Protestant Episcopal Church 

Orphan children. 

1853 

No. 


6 

18 

2 

16 




18 



609 Jackson Ave. 









5 

Colored Industrial Home. 

Private corporation. 

Homeless and destitute chil- 

1902 

Yes. 


5 

70 

46 

24 

33 



29 

8 


Gentilly Ave. 


dren. 


1 





6 

Destitue Orphan Boys’ Home... 

Private corporation.... 

Destitute orphan boys. 

1824 

No. 


8 

1 

15 

15 





15 



5220 St. Charles Ave. 











German Protestant Orphan Asvlum.... 
920 State St. 

Private corporation. 

Orphan children. 

1866 

No. 


9 

22 

17 

5 




22 













8 

Immaculate Conception Asvlum.. 

Sisters Marianites of Holy 
Cross. 

Orphan girls. 

1856 

No. 


2 

27 


27 

3 



24 


3503 Rampart St. 

Jewish Orphans’ Home. 

Jewish orphan children. 


8 

14 




24 


9 

Private association. 

1853 

No. 

24 

10 

5342 St. Charles Ave. 

Lafon Orphan Asylum for Colored Boys 
Gentilly Road. 

Sisters of the Holy Family.. 

Homeless and neglected or¬ 
phan boys. 


1 



14 

1 

10 

1893 

Yes. 

3 

16 

16 








11 

Lutheran Bethlehem Orphan Asylum.. 
5413 North Peters St. 

Lutheran Church, South.... 

Orphan children from 3 to 
12. 

1881 

No. 


4 

15 

9 

6 




15 








12 

Mount Carmel Orphan Asylum.... 

Sisters of Mount Carmel. 

Homeless and destitute girls. 

1S69 

No. 


2 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 




( 2 ) 


729 Piety St. 









13 

New Orleans Female Orphan Asvlum.. 
1404 Clio St. 

Sisters of Charity. 

Orphan girls. 

1S36 

No. 

( 2 ) 

4 

30 


30 

9 



7 

14 








14 

Newsboys’ Home. 

Conference of St. Vincent de 

Newsboys, working and 
homeless boys. 

1879 

No. 



100 

100 




( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

349 Baronne St. 

Paul. 






15 

Poydras Asylum. 

Female Orphan Society. 

Orphan and destitute girls.. 

1817 

No. 


15 

30 


30 

4 



24 

2 

’ 5354 Magazine St. 







16 

Protestant Orphans’ Home. 

Private corporation. 

Orphan and destitute chil¬ 
dren. 

1853 

No. 


10 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

3020 Magazine St. 



17 

Receiving Home of Louisiana S. P. C. C. 
642 Jordan Ave. 

Louisiana Society Preven¬ 
tion of Cruelty to Children. 

Delinquent, homeless, and 
dependent children. 

1S92 

No. 


13 

301 

300 

1 

301 











18 

Sacred Heart Orphan Asylum. 

Sisters of the Sacred Heart.. 

Orphan and destitute girls.. 

1S93 

No. 


1 

24 


24 




24 


3400 Esplana*de Ave." 







19 

St. Alphonsus Orphanage. 

Sisters of Mercy. 

Orphan and homeless chil- 

1876 

No. 


14 

77 

26 

51 

34 


2 

38 

3 

2709 SaratogaSt. 


dren. 





20 

St. Joseph’s Orphan Asylum. 

School Sisters of Notre Dame 

Orphan and homeless chil¬ 
dren over 2. 

1853 

No. 


3 

7 

6 

1 




7 


Josephine and Laurel Sts. 









21 

St. Mary’s Catholic Orphan Boys’ 
Asylum. 

Sisters Marianites of Holy 
Cross. 

Orphan boys. 

1835 

No. 


10 

158 

158 


14 



144 









4111 Chartres St. 















22 

St. Vincent’s Infant Asylum. 

Sisters of Charity. 

Foundlings, orphan and in¬ 
digent children. 

Orphan girls. 

1858 

No. 

( 2 ) 

9 

342 

149 

193 

33 



230 

79 


1507 Magazine St. 




23 

Ursuline Orphanage. 

Ursuline Nuns. 

1727 

No. 



( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 




( 2 ) 



4580 Dauphine St. 











Shreveport: 















24 

Genevieve Orphanage. 

Private corporation. 

Orphan children. 

1900 

No. 


3 

15 

6 

9 




15 



864 Olive St. 











1 Includes report of Kentucky Home Society for Colored Children. 3 Not reported. 3 Includes report of the Kentucky Children's Home Society. 




























































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


107 


CARE OF CHILDREN: 1910 —Continued. 


CHILDREN IN THE 
CLOSE OF 

INSTITUTION 

YEAR. 

AT 

CHILDREN 
OUTSIDE BUT 
UNDER 
SUPERVISION. 

CHILDREN 
PLACED IN 
FAMILIES 
DURING 
YEAR. 

CHILDREN 
DISCHARGED 
DURING YEAR. 

RECEIPTS 

DURING 

YEAR. 


PAYMENTS DURING 
YEAR. 

VALUE OF 
PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

*c3 

-*-» 

O 

ft 

© 

*c3 

s 

S, 

a 

© 

ft 

Dependent. 

KSl 

'So 

U. 

o 

CO 

O 

bJO 

g 

3 

(h 

O 

£ 

© 

3 

cr 

.g 

'S 

A 

Total. 

Derived from— 

o 

a I 

2 3 
ft o 

O 

£ 

<s> 

d 

ot 

03 

> 

H 

u 

© 

o 

pH 

<! 

3 

o 

Eh 

© 

a 

© 

g 

© 

ft 

3 

o 

Eh 

© 

*3 

a 

© 

g 

© 

ft 

3 

o 

ft 

© 

*3 

a 

© 

g 

© 

ft 

Ap¬ 

pro- 

pria- 

tions. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 

mates. 

Other 

sources 

Total. 

For 

run¬ 

ning 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total 

(includ¬ 

ing 

invested 

funds). 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

70 

31 

39 

70 





3 

3 





25 

13 

12 

$22,807 


$6,941 

$2,511 

$13,355 

$22,596 

$8,127 

$14,469 

$206,607 

$136,699 

37 

18 

19 

15 


22 









10 

4 

6 

6,062 

$300 

4,952 

160 

650 

5,750 

5,750 

37,332 

24,000 

1 

1 


1 




1 

3 

2 

1 

14 

6 

8 

3 

1 

2 

3,717 

3,387 

330 



4,255 

4,255 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

58 

22 

36 

58 





3 


3 

70 

36 

34 

7 

3 

4 

26,152 

8,818 


17,334 

32,044 

18,502 

13,542 

310,700 

100,000 

39 

20 

19 

39 








14 

7 

7 

1 

1 


10,526 


2,000 


.8,526 

8,393 

8,393 

93,173 

36,500 

30 

30 


15 


15 









5 

5 


4,353 


2,388 


1,965 

1 

4,333 

4,333 


34,495 

20,000 

34 

13 

21 

34 





72 

18 

54 

18 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

3 


3 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 



( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

25,000 

25,000 

27 

7 

20 

14 


13 



3 

2 

1 

21 

9 

12 

4 

2 

2 

3,370 

144 

300 


2,926 

3,000 

2,736 

264 

103,800 

100,000 

34 


34 

25 


9 



2 


2 

3 


3 




4,500 




4,500 

6,800 

6,000 

800 

( 2 ) 

16,000 

83 

41 

42 



83 



1184 

525 

659 

303 

122 

181 

102 

55 

47 

49,127! 

32,138 

511 


16,478 

49,378 

49,378 


42,988 

42,988 

129 

69 

60 

98 


31 



6 

2 

4 




18 

10 

8 

17,284 

107 

15,602 

1,575 

15,142 

12,309 

2,833 

75,000 

75,000 

51 


51 

1 

1 

48 


1 







( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

3,525 


134 

286 

3,105 

4,025 

4,025 

12,000 

12,000 

25 

18 

7 

25 





6 

4 

2 

6 

4 

2 

4 

3 

1 

2,500 


2,500 



2,900 

1,900 

1,000 

20,500 

12,500 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( j ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

25 


25 

25 











( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

895 

120 

775 



875 

875 


10,000 

10,000 

56 


56 

56 











6 


6 

1,190 

240 

140 


810 

1,654' 

1,654 


12,000 

12,000 

84 

38 

46 

79 

4 



1 

1 

1 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

9,072 


9,072 



9,072 

9,072 


20,000 

20,000 

82 

3 

79 

82 





12 


12 

2 

2 

13 

13 

9,889 

504 

6,510 


2,875 

7,085 

6,477 

608 

(*) 

( 2 ) 

78 

42 

36 

32 

3 

43 



10 

6 

4 

22 

14 

8 

53 

29 

24 

3,498 

1,200 

1,040 

832 

426 

10,220 

3,720 

6,500 

75,000 

75,000 

67 

67 


27 


40 



5 

5 


3 

3 





( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

93 

54 

39 

93 











25 

11 

14 

12,407 

600 

7,852 

353 

3,602 

8,010 

6,965 

1,045 

74,500 

4,500 

\ ,j 

67 


67 

63 

4 










7 


7 

1,084 

528 

556 



2,000 

2,000 


9,000 

9,000, 

120 

80 

40 

103 


17 









20 

10 

10 

63,387 

504 

13,512 


49,371 

64,932 

64,932 


410,899 

200,000 

59 

59 

56 

2 



1 




1 

] 


4 

4 


3,123 


116 

20 

2,987 

3,373 

3,073 

300 

( 2 ) 

30,000 

83 

37 

46 

83 











13 

3 

10 

3,377 

204 


1,290 

1,883 

4,644 

4,644 


48,000 

48,000 

84 

84 

84 








10 


10 

25 


25 

1,610 

900 

350 

360 

3,650 

3,650 


( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

123 


123 

86 

2 

35 









90 


90 

6,775 

1,500 

824 

102 

4,349 

6,521 

6,171 

350 

150,000 

150,000 

100 

100 




10C 


500 

500 





( 2 ) 

( 2 > 


i ( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

1 ( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

88 

88 

14 

1 

73 









32 

32 

! 21,896 

360 

1,036 

500 

20,000 

20,896 

18,000 

2,896 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

82 

80 

52 

72 

3 










( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

900 

1,071 

671 

( 2 ) 

13,108 

13,108 


4 100,000 

* 100,000 

1*7 

157 

5 

17 

23 

112 




... 

6 

5 

1 

255 

255 

17,265 

11,070 

857 


5,338 

16,320 

16,320 

. 

50,000 

50,000 

94 

94 

78 


If 







33 


33 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

<, 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

77 

30 

47 

43 




34 







43 

6 

37 

5,260 

1,S0C 

1,200 

36C 

1,900 

5,000 

3,000 

2,000 

5 50,000 

5 50,000 

157 

q*> 

62 

133 


'M 









42 

25 

17 

3,793 

792 

360 

. 

2,641 

3,607 

2,493 

1,114 

75,000 

75,000 

340 

340 

340 










108 

1 

108 


17,628 

7,20C 

2,770 

359 

7,299 

17,323 

17,323 


( 2 > 

165,000 

347 

1 158 

189 

315 

3 

29 

i .... 


45 

21 

24 

45 

21 

24 

235 

114 

121 

16,459 

5,00C 

3,56C 

. 

7,899 

16,489 

13,665 

2,821 

8 46,00C 

8 46,000 

88 

1 

88 

.88 














( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

33 

( 2 ) 

(?) 

33 



1 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

2 

1 

1 

8 

3 

5 

( 2 ) 

27,00C 

( 2 > 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

30,000 

100,ooc 

100,000 


£ 


a 

a 

o 


=3 


a 

f-H 


12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 
21 
22 

23 

24 

25 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 
19 


20 

21 

22 

23 

24 


< Exclusive of improvements. 


5 Property owned by Redemptorist Fathers. 


8 Includes value of St. Joseph’s Maternity Hospital. 






















































































































































































































































































































Institution number. 


108 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table I.— INSTITUTIONS FOR THE 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 

9 

10 

11 

12 


2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 
21 
22 

23 

24 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


MAINE. 

Augusta: 

Maine Children’s Home. 

129 Sewall St. 

Bangor: 

Bangor Children’s Home. 

Ohio St. 

Bath: 

Military and Naval Orphan Asylum... 


Belfast: 

Belfast Girls’ Home. 

53 Northport Ave. 

Fairfield: 

Good Will Farm. 

Hinckley P. O. 

Gardiner: 

House of the Good Shepherd. 

Lincoln St. 

Lewiston: 

Girls’ Orphanage. 

Sabattus St. 

Healey Asylum. 

81 Ash St. 

Portland: 

Female Orphan Asylum. 

62 State St. 

Maine Home for Friendless Boys. 
1383 Forest Ave. 

St. Elizabeth’s Orphan Asylum.. 
87 High St. 

York Village: 

Lucas Home. 


MARYLAND. 

Annapolis Junction: 

National Junior Republic. 


Baltimore: 

All Saints Home for Children. 

1701 Warwick Ave. 

Baltimore Manual Labor School.. 

Relay P. O. 

Baltimore Orphan Asylum. 

215 North Strieker St. 

Boys’ Home Society. 

350 North Calvert St. 

Christ Church Asylum. 

Twenty-first St. and Guilford Ave. 

Dolan Children’s Aid Asylum. 

1709 Gough St. 

Egenton Orphan Asylum. 

Cedar Ave. and Fortieth St. 

German Orphan Asylum. 

224 Aisquith St. 

Hebrew Children’s Protective Associa¬ 
tion Home. 

24 North Broadway. 

Hebrew Orphan Asylum. 

Rayner Ave. 

Home of the Friendless. 

1315 Druid Hill Ave. 

Johns Hopkins Colored Orphan Asylum. 


Kelso Home for Orphans. 

Forest and Garrison Aves. (Forest 
Park P. O.). 

Orphans’ Home.. 

1707 Gough St. 

St. Anthony’s Orphan Asylum.. 

927 North Central Ave. 

St. Elizabeth’s Home.. 

317 St. Paul St. 

St. Frances’ Orphanage.. 

East Chase St. 

St. James’ Home for Boys.. 

301 North High St. 

St. John’s Orphanage for Boys. 


Fair Oak Ave. (Waverly). 

St. Joseph’s School of Industry. 

Charles and Twenty-eighth Sts. 

St. Mary’s Female Orphan Asylum_ 

Cold Spring Lane (Roland Park 
P. O.l. 

St.Mary’s Home for Little Colored Boys. 

1601 West Presstman St. 

St. Paul’s Industrial School for Girls. 
2411 North Charles St. 


Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of children received. 

Year founded. 

Colored children receive 

Number of cottages. 

© 

C/3 

o 

’o 

C3 

CO 

© 

© 

o 

ft 

a 

© 

2 

a 

ft 

Total. 

Male. 

Private corporation. 

Homeless, neglected, and 

1899 

No. 


10 

28 

12 


dependent children. 







Private corporation. 

Orphan and homeless chil- 

1836 

Yes. 

.... 

7 

4 

(*) 


dren. 







State of Maine. 

Soldiers’and sailors’ orphan 

1886 

Yes. 

C 1 ) 

10 

10 

5 


children and grandchil- 








dren. 







Children’s Aid Society of 

Destitute and homeless girls. 

1895 

No. 

.... 

5 

18 

.... 

Maine. 








Private corporation. 

Normal, needy, and im- 

1889 

No. 

12 

31 

36 

32 


periled children. 







Protestant Episcopal Church 

Orphan and indigent chil- 

1890 

No. 

1 

3 

5 

2 


dren under 13. 







Sisters of Charity. 

Orphan and neglected girls 

1878 

Yes. 


1 

34 

.... 


from 3 to 18. 







Sisters of Charity (Grey 

Orphan boys. 

1893 

Yes. 



6 

6 

Nuns). 








Private corporation. 

Orphan children. 

1828 

Yes. 


5 

21 

3 

Private corporation. 

Orphan and homeless boys. 

1893 

Yes. 

. . . . 

3 

32 

32 

Sisters of Mercy. 

Orphan and neglected chil- 

1873 

Yes. 


6 

14 



dren. 









1898 

No. 






dren. 







Private association. 

Incorrigible and wayward 

1899 

No. 

3 

10 

25 

24 


children. 







All Saints Sisters of the Poor. 

Orphan and homeless girls.. 

1899 

No. 

.... 

4 

8 

.... 

Private corporation.. 

Indigent boys from 5 to 14... 

1840 

No. 

.... 

9 

22 

22 

Private corporation. 

Orphan and destitute chil- 

1778 

No. 


12 

23 

7 


dren. 







Private corporation. 

Worthy homeless boys. 

1866 

No. 


10 

39 

39 

Christ Church (Episcopal)... 

Destitute girls. 

1839 

No. 

.... 

2 

5 


Young Catholics Friend 

Orphan and homeless chil- 

1872 

No. 


3 

4 

3 

Society. 

dren from 4 to 12. 







First Presbyterian Church.. 

Orphan and destitute girls 

1860 

No. 

2 3 

9 

4 

.... 


from 4 to 18. 







Private corporation. 

Orphan and destitute chil- 

1864 

No. 


9 

20 

5 


dren. 







Hebrew United Charities.... 

Orphan and dependent chil- 

1901 

No. 


10 

20 

11 


dren. 







Federated Jewish Charities.. 

Indigent orphan children.... 

1872 

No. 

... . 

16 

30 

17 

Private corporation. 

Orphan and abandoned 

1852 

No. 


21 

50 

23 


children. 







Johns Hopkins Hospital.... 

Orphan girls. 

1867 

Yes. 

.... 

5 

4 

.... 

Methodist Episcopal Church. 

Orphan girls from 4 to 12.... 

1873 

No. 

.... 

5 

6 

.... 

Sisters of the Holy Cross.... 

Orphan and dependent boys 

1860 

No. 


3 

3 

3 


from 6 to 12. 







School Sisters of Notre Dame 

Orphan and neglected chil- 

1852 

No. 

.... 

1 

33 

17 


dren. 







Franciscan Sisters. 

Foundlings and destitute 

1879 

( 3 ) 


3 

167 

65 


children. 





» 


Oblate Sisters of Providence. 

Orphan, homeless, and neg- 

1866 

( 3 ) 


4 

15 



lected girls. 







Xaverian Brothers. 

Indigent boys. 

1878 

No. 


5 

65 

65 

St. John’s Church (Episco- 

Orphan boys. 

1883 

No. 


2 

7 

7 

pal). 








Sisters of Charity. 

Orphan girls. 

1865 

No. 


8 

31 


Sisters of Charity. 

Orphan and destitute girls.. 

1816 

No. 

.... 

6 

48 

.... 

All Saints Sisters of the Poor. 

Destitute bovs. 

1880 

Yes. 

.... 

5 

9 

9 

St. Paul’s Church (Episco- 

Orphan and destitute girls.. 

1801 

No. 


7 

5 

.... 


1 Not reported. 


CHILDREN RECEIVED FOR FIRST 
TIME IN 1910. 


16 

0) 

5 

18 

4 

3 

34 


18 


14 


16 


5 
1 
4 

15 

9 

13 

27 

4 

6 


16 

102 

15 


31 

48 


Through— 


24 

4 


19 


52 


13 


33 


40 


O ^ M 
«•= .2 
ft a 

> v- 03 

^ O tJO 
+-» C/3 G3 

os’®' fe 

— C £ 
© **— 

«£ o 


4 

10 


10 

18 

35 

5 

29 


21 

7 

14 


8 

22 

18 

39 

5 


4 

20 


30 

50 

1 

6 


106 

15 


7 

9 

30 


16 ... 


2 Only two occupied 























































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


109 


CARE OF CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


CHILDREN IN THE 
CLOSE OF 

INSTITUTION 

YEAR. 

AT 

CHILDREN 
OUTSIDE BUT 
UNDER 
SUPERVISION. 

CHILDREN 
PLACED IN 
FAMILIES 
DURING 
YEAR. 

CHILDREN 
DISCHARGED 
DURING YEAR. 

RECEIPTS 

DURING YEAR. 


PAYMENTS DURING 
YEAR. 

VALUE OF 
PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

j Institution number. 

Total. 

© 

a 

Female. 

Dependent. 

Working boys or girls. 

Delinquent. 

Total. 

Derived from— 

Orphans and 
foundlings. 

1 

© 

0 jj 

2 

> 

3 

All other. 

*c3 

0 

H 

© 

s 

Female. 

3 

O 

© 

a 

Female. 

*3 

■£3 

O 

H 

© 

% 

a 

Female. 

Ap- 
p ro¬ 
ta¬ 
tions. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources 

Total. 

For 

run¬ 

ning 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total 

(includ¬ 

ing 

invested 

funds). 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

.j<> 

31 

19 

49 




1 




52 

25 

27 

2 

2 


$7,365 

$1,250 

$5,915 


$200 

$6, 448 

$6,379 

$69 

$6,500 

$6,500 

1 

33 

14 

19 

28 


5 






6 

2 

4 

O) 

O) 

( l ) 

9,582 

750 

510 

$1,004 

7,318 

8,955 

8,955 


( x ) 

0) 

2 

64 

33 

31 

64 











14 

8 

6 

8,500 

8,500 



8, 497 

8,497 


(0 

( l ) 

3 

0) 


0) 

0) 

(»> 

0) 

0) 

(>) 

15 


15 




0) 


O) 

0) 

1,500 

(!) 

(!) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

( l ) 

7,000 

7,000 

4 

173 

143 

30 

158 

15 




• 



29 

23 

6 

34,549 


15,413 

12,174 

6,96? 

36,715 

33,342 

3,373 

425,407 

206,100 

5 

15 

8 

7 

( x ) 


O) 






2 


2 

3 


3 

2,257 


721 

516 

1,020 

2,243 

2,243 

C 1 ) 

0) 

6 

114 


114 

86 


28 



9 


9 

2 


2 

32 


32 

4,074 

500 

97 

3,392 

85 

7,613 

7,613 


35,000 

35,000 

7 

180 

180 


180 











(i) 

( l ) 


7,500 

1,000 

753 


5,747 

15,555 

0) 

( l ) 

65,000 

65,000 

8 

35 

11 

24 

35 











12 

4 

8 

5,655 

580 

794 

4,281 

5,307 

4,905 

402 

41,000 

26,000 

9 

25 

25 


20 

2 



3 

(i) 

0) 


27 

27 


10 

10 


2,900 

2,000 

300 

300 

300 

3,147 

2,947 

200 

18,000 

12,000 

10 

156 


156 

148 


8 



6 

6 

1 


1 

10 


10 

0) 

o) 

0) 

( i ) 

( i ) 

0) 

C 1 ) 

( l ) 

0) 

0) 

11 

g 

5 

3 

6 


2 












829 

829 

905 

905 




12 

47 

46 

1 

11 




36 







15 

14 

1 

15,530 

4,600 



10,930 

15,530 

14,530 

1,000 

17,000 

17,000 

1 

20 


20 

17 


3 









8 


8 

3,082 

1,417 

1,230 

435 

3,082 

3,082 


13,750 

10,000 

2 

50 

50 




50 









4 

4 


5,583 

1,500 


4,083 

8,322 

7,316 

1,006 

90,000 

40,000 

3 

110 

40 

70 

no 





17 

14 

3 

8 

3 

5 

15 

6 

9 

9,693 

2,000 

616 

608 

6,469 

9,835 

9,022 

813 

170,000 

50,000 

4 

(i\ 

(n 


(l) 

( i ) 

0) 

0) 

( i ) 







10 

10 


11,550 

2,000 

550 

4,000 

5,000 

12,695 

12,695 


100,000 

40,000 

5 

25 


25 

25 

(>) 


0) 




3 


3 

3,829 

2,589 

1,240 

3,523 

2,977 

546 

41,000 

'25,000 

6 

32 

0) 

m 

30 


2 




3 

2 

1 

3 

1 

2 

2,971 


689 

321 

1,961 

3,153 

2,056 

1,097 

( l ) 

(*) 

7 

30 

\ / 

30 

30 











4 


4 

11,495 




11,495 

10,909 

10,909 


325,000 

75,000 

8 

123 

60 

63 

123 





45 

45 





17 

10 

7 

20,400 

2,500 

11,581 


6,319 

13,094 

12,015 

1,079 

o) 

0) 

9 

4Q 

29 

20 

47 




2 










12,000 

3,000 

9,000 



13,000 

12,500 

500 

65,000 

65,000 

10 

qs 

56 

42 

9S 











24 

16 

8 

19,576 

2,997 

10,777 


5,802 

20,393 

18,336 

2,057 

205,000 

100,000 

11 

ion 

m 

m 

on 


01 






17 

(>) 

0) 

33 

(?) 

O) 

16,671 

5,414 

1,721 

876 

8,660 

17,822 

17,822 


0) 

0) 

12 

A1 

V, / 

v. ) 

61 

\ / 

61 








9 

9 

4 

4 

11,340 



11,340 

11,340 

11,340 


63,271 

63,271 

13 

42 


42 

42 











6 


6 

8,603 


1,729 

675 

6,199 

8,192 

7,692 

500 

140,000 

60,000 

14 

10 

19 

19 











4 

4 


1,668 


320 


1,348 

1,786 

1,604 

182 

37,000 

10,000 

15 

100 


45 

77 


23 



• 






12 

6 

6 

4,303 

1,000 

510 

1,196 

1,597 

7,046 

5,068 

1,978 

50,000 

50,000 

16 

118 

42 

70 


3 

115 



27 

3 

24 

27 

6 

21 

51 


51 

16,846 

4,922 

1,683 

502 

9,739 

16,833 

16,194 

639 

100,000 

100,000 

17 



1 nr 

90 


16 



18 


18 

18 


18 




3,000 

500 

2,500 



3,300 

3,000 

300 

150,000 

150,000 

18 

co 

59 


41 


q 


2 


15 

15 


95 

95 


5,461 


931 

4,396 

134 

5,600 

5,600 


50,000 

50,000 

19 

O— 

Q 

q 


9 










6 

6 


1,334 


376 

333 

625 

1,434 

1,434 


29,801 

10,000 

20 

79 


79 

79 





01 


01 

21 


21 

8 


8 

0) 

(!) 

0) 

0) 


0) 

0) 


0) 

0) 

21 

202 


202 

154 


48 



164 


164 

61 


61 

73 


73 

0) 

( l ) 

0) 

( l ) 

o) 

o) 

(*) 

(>) 

0) 

0 ) 

22 

21 

21 



A 









13 

13 


3,112 

500 

1,989 

. 

623 

3,036 

3,036 

....... 

43,00C 

25,000 

23 

9Q 


39 

39 











5 


5 

7,000 



7,000 

7,000 

7,000 

, 

0) 

C 1 ) 

24 





























3 Colored only, 
























































































































































































































110 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table I.— INSTITUTIONS FOR THE 


2 

6 

a 

a 

a 

o 


25 


26 


27 


28 

29 

30 

31 

32 

33 

34 

35 

36 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 
21 

22 








f-H 

CS 

CHILDREN RECEIVED 

FOR FIRST 










TIME IN 1910. 







T3 


o 













> 

’© 

o 

© 

S 

© 

w 

o 

© 




Through— 

NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of children received. 


a 

C3 

-4-i 

Cj 

C/3 





© 

be 






© 

'O 

a 

3 

3 

33 

A 

o 

>3 

© 

O 

© 

o 

u 

© 

rO 

© 

>> 

o 

P4 

a 

© 



© 

3 

© 

e 

o 

o 

**-i o 

o 

■a 1 

a© 

-og 

© •£ 

—1 o 

C/3 

cs'd 

© 

*© 

a 

© 

te 

03 

L- 




a 

© 

£ 

a 

3 

2 

’c3 

cO 

o 

© 

a 

© 

3 

3 

i-a 

rd 

— a 
©© 

© 

5 





o 

& 

Ph 


a 


CL 

o 

O 


o 

MARYLAND-Continued. 















Baltimore—C ontinued. 















St. Peter’s Asylum for Female Children 

St. Peter’s Church (Episco- 

Orphan and indigent girls... 

1845 

No. 


9 

3 


3 


3 













1219 Myrtle Ave. 

St. Peter (Salvers’ Industrial School for 

pal). 

Institute of Mission Helpers 
(Catholic). 

1893 

Yes. 



9 


9 



1 

8 


Homeless girls .. 

Colored Girls. 












416 West Biddle St. 












353 


St. Vincent’s Infant Asylum. 

Sisters of Charity. 

Foundlings, and infant, or¬ 
phan, ana neglected chil- 

1856 

No. 


46 

448 

287 

161 

61 


34 


Division st. and Lafayette Ave. 














dren. 













Samuel Ready School... 

Private corporation... 

Normal orphan girls from 5 
to 13. 

1887 

No. 


9 

75 


75 




75 


North and Harford Aves. 










Universal Progressive School for Orphan 

Private corporation (Bap- 

Orphan, destitute, and in¬ 
corrigible children. 

1902 

Yes. 

.... 

6 

IS 

12 

6 

9 

5 

. . . . 

4 


and Destitute Colored Children. 

tist). 













1132 Pennsylvania Ave. 













Bucreystown: 















Buckingham Industrial School . 

Private corporation.. 

Indigent boys . 

1898 

No. 


11 

8 

8 





8 


Easton: 











Home for Friendless Children. 

Private corporation (Episco¬ 
pal). 

Friendless girls.... 

1870 

No. 


3 

7 






7 













Ellicott City: 














Maryland Home for Friendless Colored 
Children. 

Private organization 

Homeless children from 3 to 

1900 

Yes. 


(■ 

19 

0) 

(*) 

(») 



(>) 



10. 





Frederick: 















Episcopal Orphan House. 

All Saints Church (Episco¬ 
pal). 

Orphan girls. 

1837 

No. 


2 

1 


1 




1 













Loats’ Orphan Asylum 

General Synod of the Luth¬ 
eran Church. 

Orphan girls from 6 to 18.... 

1881 

No. 


3 









East Church St. 











Hagerstown: 















Washington County Home. 

Private corporation. 

Orphan and friendless chil¬ 
dren. 

1883 

No. 


6 

20 

12 

8 

2 

11 


7 


407 South Potomac St. 











Towson: 















St. Vincent’s Male Orphan Asylum_ 

York Road and Five Mile Lane. 

Sisters of Mercy. 

Orphan and neglected boys 
from 6 to 12. 

1838 

No. 


4 

59 

59 


11 


6 

21 

21 








MASSACHUSETTS. 

• 














Avon: 















Lutheran Orphans’ Home. 

Augustana Synod. 

Orphan and destitute chil¬ 
dren. 

1906 

No. 


4 

9 

4 

5 




9 













Boston: 















Church Home. 

Private corporation (Episco¬ 
pal). 

Orphan, homeless, and neg¬ 
lected children. 

1855 

No. 


15 

24 

13 

11 


2 

1 

10 

11 

North and Fourth Sts. (South 







Boston). 














Daly Industrial School. 

Sisters of St. Joseph. 

Deserving girls from 12 to 
18. 

1899 

( l ) 


i 

38 


38 




38 


Ill Train St. (Dorchester). 








Farm and Trades School. 

Private corporation. 

Worthy poor orphan and- 
other boys from 10 to 14. 

1814 

Yes. 


21 

33 

33 





33 


Thompson’s Island (Box 1486). 








Home for Destitute Catholic Children.. 

Sisters of Charity. 

Neglected children. 

1864 

Yes. 


9 

830 

434 

396 


(') 


0) 


788 Harrison Ave. 







Home for Destitute Jewish Children 3 

Federation of Jewish Chari- 

Destitute children. 

1899 

No. 


7 

30 

18 

12 




30 


Canterbury St. (Dorchester). 

ties. 








House of the Angel Guardian. 

Brothers of Charity. 

Orphan.homeless,and way¬ 
ward boys and boarders. 

1851 

Yes. 


8 

390 

390 


97 



293 


85 Vernon St. (Roxbury). 







Hunt Asylum for Destitute Children.. 

Private corporation. 

Destitute Protestant chil- 

1833 

Yes. 


1 

3 

1 

2 





3 

10 Eden St. 


dren. 









Industrial School for Girls. 

Private corporation. 

Dependent girls. 

1853 

Yes. 


4 

4 


4 




4 


Centre St. (Dorchester). 













Leversidge Institution of Industry.... 

Private organization. 

Destitute and homeless boys. 

1881 

No. 


10 

9 

9 





9 


291 River St. (Mattapan). 










Martin Luther Orphans’ Home. 

Synodical Conference. 

German orphan children.... 

1871 

Yes. 


4 

6 

3 

3 





6 

Baker St. (West Roxbury). 











Massachusetts Infant Asylum. 

Private corporation. 

Infants under 2 years. 

1867 

Yes. 

0) 

31 

263 

161 

102 

5 

1 

10 

104 

143 

106 ChestnutAve. (Jamaica Plain). 




Mount Hope Home. 

Boston North End Mission.. 

Orphan and needy children 
from 2 to 14. 

1867 

Yes. 


11 

27 

14 

13 




27 


Bourne and Florence Sts. (Roslin- 







dale). 















New England Home for Little Wan¬ 
derers. 

Private corporation. 

Homeless and destitute chil- 

1865 

Yes. 


35 

197 

106 

91 

16 



157 

24 


dren. 




202 West Newton St. 















Nickerson Home for Children. 

Private corporation. 

Orphan, homeless, and des¬ 
titute children. 

1835 

Yes. 


4 

23 

18 

5 




23 


14 Tyler St. 









St. Mary’s Infant Asylum. 

Sisters of Charity. 

Dependent children. 

1901 

Yes. 


0 ) 

467 

(') 

0 ) 




467 


90 Cushing Ave. (Dorchester). 








St. Vincent’s Orphan Asylum_ 

Sisters of Charity. 

Orphan girls. 

1843 

Yes. 


7 

125 


125 



10 

115 


Camden St. and Shawmut Ave. 









Temporary Home. 

Massachusetts Society Pre¬ 
vention Cruelty to Chil- 

Neglected or delinquent chil¬ 
dren. 

1878 

Yes. 


6 

213 

0 ) 

(>) 


213 




43 Mount Vernon St. 








dren. 














Cambridge: 















Avon Home. 

Private corporation. 

Destitute children. 

1874 

Yes. 


11 

77 

42 

35 

5 

6 

20 

38 

8 

309 Mount Auburn St. 






Fall River: 















Children’s Home of Fall River. 

Private corporation. 

Orphan and homeless chil- 

1873 

Yes. 


6 

22 

14 

8 




22 


427 Robeson St. 


efren. 







St. Joseph’s Orphanage. 

Sisters of Charity (Grey 
Nuns). 

Orphan and destitute chil¬ 
dren. 

1890 

No. 


9 

232 

130 

102 

6 


2 

224 


56 Bassett St. 







St. Vincent’s Home.. . 

Private corporation. 

Orphan and neglected chil¬ 
dren. 

1886 

Yes. 


9 

44 

25 

19 

4 

36 


4 


2860 North Main St. 









1 Not reported. 


2 Includes report of St. Vincent’s Maternity Hospital. 














































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


111 


CARE OF CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


CHILDREN IN THE INSTITUTION 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

AT 

CHILDREN 
OUTSIDE BUT 
UNDER 
SUPERVISION. 

CHILDREN 
PLACED IN 
FAMILIES 
DURING 
YEAR. 

CHILDREN 

DISCHARGED 

1 DURING YEAR. 

RECEIPTS 

DURING YEAR. 

PAYMENTS DURING 
YEAR. 

VALUE OF 
PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Total. 

© 

a 

© 

'ce 

a 

© 

Ph 

Dependent. 

Working boys or girls. 

Delinquent. 

Total. 

Derived from— 


Orphans and 
foundlings. 

Invalid or defec¬ 
tive. 

All other. 

■a 

o 

EH 

© 

'oS 

a 

© 

a 

© 

fH 

13 

-*-> 

o 

H 

© 

13 

a 

©* 

a 

© 

CH 

13 

•*-> 

o 

© 

13 

3 

© 

13 

a 

© 

Ph 

Ap¬ 
pro- 
13 ria- 
tions. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources 

Total. 

For 

run¬ 

ning 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total 

(includ¬ 

ing 

invested 

funds). 

• 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

20 


20 

20 











1 


1 

$1 011 


$106 


$905 

$1 001 

$1 001 


$27 105 

$17 525 

25 

38 

.... 

38 

32 

.... 

6 









22 

.... 

22 

p) 

$300 

p) 

p) 

p) 

P) 

p) 

pj 

P) 

f 

26 

617 

368 

249 

117 

.... 

500 









195 

p) 

p) 

2 31,439 

9,004 

2,775 

$10,906 

8,754 

2 31,408 

26,485 

$4,923 

2 220,000 

220,000 

27 

(i) 


0) 

P) 











15 


15 





m 

(i) 

(i) 

p> 

(i) 

yn 

28 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 


0) 


P) 







22 

12 

10 

\ i 

2 923 

1,210 


333 

V ) 

873 

2 971 

2 971 

2 000 

V / 

2 000 

29 

50 

50 


50 



4 

4 





8 

8 

15 096 

3 500 

11 596 

15 065 

15 065 


115 003 

77,332 

30 

30 


30 

29 


1 



6 


6 

6 


6 




3 312 

1 250 

355 


1 707 

3,100 

2,801 

299 

33,160 

9,000 

31 

34 

0) 

0) 



34 






9 

0) 

(i) 

5 


m 

11 545 

6 OQ'i 

*3in 


5 140 

10 541 

2 951 

7 590 

m 

m 

32 

11 


11 

11 





0) 


(*) 

P) 


p) 

o) 


v / 

p> 

2,300 

P) 

pj 

p) 

p> 

2,081 

1,827 

254 

v ) 

P) 

v. ) 

p) 

33 

16 


16 

16 











1 


1 

3,781 




3 781 

2,850 

2,050 

800 

56,400 

29,250 

34 

25 

12 

13 

13 


11 


1 

143 

94 

49 

14 

13 

1 

7 

6 

1 

4,000 

1,S00 



2,200 

3,555 

3,186 

369 

91,000 

16,000 

35 

97 

97 


51 

2 

44 









40 

40 


17 257 

2,806 

7 290 

720 

6,441 

11 885 

11 303 

582 

m 

m 

36 

36 

21 

15 

28 


8 












6,071 

4 733 

1 338 

6,035 

5,443 

592 

\ / 

15,500 

v / 

15,500 

1 

62 

16 

46 

27 


35 



26 

21 

5 

13 

6 

7 

15 

4 

11 

30,017 


19,362 

1,554 

9,101 

16,539 

16,539 


247,232 

51,000 

2 

77 


77 

1 


76 









(i) 


p) 

8,268 


753 

7,515 

9,279 

9,279 


127,000 

100,000 

3 

96 

96 




96 



100 

100 





23 

23 

26,440 


5,722 

4,368 

16,350 

48,022 

38,250 

9,772 

277,269 

62,575 

4 

212 

139 

73 



212 



2237 

1184 

1053 

688 

349 

339 

555 

298 

257 

35,979 


7,567 

28,412 

31,120 

27,620 

3,500 

225,257 

140,000 

5 

62 

42 

20 

44 


18 









28 

18 

10 

9,753 


9,753 


9,500 

9,500 

12,000 

12,000 

6 

326 

326 


176 


4 86 


64 







455 

455 


50,426 


22,081 

21,349 

6,996 

48,970 

15,657 

33,313 

245,426 

245,426 

7 

4 

1 

3 

4 





3 

1 

2 




3 

2 

1 

2,056 


549 

1,507 

1,552 

1,552 

22,954 

5,000 

8 

23 


23 

15 


8 



1 


1 




13 


13 

7,910 


2,088 


5,822 

7,951 

7,951 


137,458 

20,600 

9 

47 

47 


43 


4 







- 


9 

9 


19,765 



19,765 

20,642 

20,642 


463,104 

236,800 

10 

43 

19 

24 

43 











12 

8 

4 

4,725 


2,242 

568 

1,915 

4,468 

4,46S 


36,500 

25,000 

11 

89 

50 

39 


23 

66 



66 

39 

27 

120 

72 

48 

226 

128 

98 

24,619 


8,375 

6,293 

9.951 

35,564 

35,564 


198,279 

51,255 

12 

33 

17 

16 

20 


13 



82 

51 

31 

27 

12 

15 

19 

11 

8 

10,011 


6,009 

2,350 

1,652 

10,824 

10,824 


52,851 

16,000 

13 

100 

58 

42 

47 


53 



545 

300 

245 

86 

24 

62 

172 

93 

79 

47,418 


17,238 

2,218 

27,962 

38,723 

38,723 


794,390 

145,900 

14 

42 

24 

18 

42 




3 

1 

2 

3 

1 

2 

38 

25 

13 

4, 069 


1,645 

1,975 

449 

4,350 

3,585 

765 

24,167 

10,000 

15 

130 

0) 

(i) 

130 





66 

(>) 

P) 

140 

0) 

(*) 

469 

0) 

(i) 

5 40,418 


39,576 

491 

351 

5 48,423 

38,088 

10,335 

6 91,000 

91,000 

16 

237 

237 

227 


10 





89 

89 

13,023 


1,641 

8,258 

3,124 

18,681 

15,373 

3,308 

124,000 

124,000 

17 

12 

(i) 




12 



0) 

0) 

0) 

213 

0) 

0) 

(i) 

0) 

0) 

3,425 


3,327 

98 

3,347 

3,347 

57,000 

57,000 

18 

79 

43 

\ / 

36 

17 

1 

61 



40 

28 

12 

40 

28 

12 

78 

50 

28 

13,926 


803 

3,270 

9,853 

13,012 

13,012 


210,803 

35,700 

19 

60 

34 

26 

40 


20 



14 

7 

7 

2 

2 


27 

18 

9 

9,616 


1,642 

7,974 

7,758 

7,758 


129,000 

33,000 

20 

370 

218 

152 

332 

3 

35 





2 

1 

1 

297 

164 

133 

28,525 


1,458 

21,360 

5,707 

28,478 

18,102 

10,376 

135,000 

135,000 

21 

124 

68 

56 

124 







32 

14 

18 




14,570 


28 

1,742 

12,800 

13,152 

8,306 

4,846 

73,000 

73,000 

22 


* Formerly known as Helping Hand Home (Roxbury). 4 Boarders. 6 Includes report of St. Mary's Lying-in Hospital. 


i 



































































































































































































112 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table I.— INSTITUTIONS FOR THE 


2 

£ 

3 

a 

a 

o 


23 

24 

25 

26 

27 

28 

29 

30 

31 

32 

33 

34 

35 

36 

37 

38 

39 

40 

41 

42 

43 

44 

45 

46 

47 

48 

49 

1 

2 

3 

4 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


MASSACHUSETTS—Continued. 
Fitchburg: 

Fitchburg Union Aid Home for Chil¬ 
dren. 

27 Holt St. 

Foxboro: 

St. Augustine’s Children’s Farm and 
Convalescent Home. 

Holyoke: 

Holy Family Institute. 

Springfield Road. 

Mount St. Vincent. 

Hyde Park: 

New England Peabody Home for Crip¬ 
pled Children. 

Hale St. 

Lawrence: 

Children’s Home.. 

76 Howard St. 

Protectory of Mary Immaculate.. 

189 Maple Ave. 

Longmeadow: 

Doane Orphanage.. 

17 Longmeadow St. 

Lowell: 

Children’s Home.. 

60 Kirk St. 

Faith Home for Children. 

249 Westford St. 

French-American Orphan Asylum. 

St. Peter’s Orphan Asylum.. 

388 Chelmsford St. 

Theodore Edson Orphanage. 

13 Anne St. 

Malden: 

Volunteer Children’s Home. 

42 Sea View Ave. 

Millbury: 

St. Joseph’s Industrial School. 


Newburytort: 

Home for Destitute Children. 

9 Court St. 

Newton: 

Pomroy Home. 

24 Horey St. 

Working Boys’ Home. 

Winchester St.(Newton Highlands). 
Newton Center: 

Home for Missionaries’ Children. 

1136 Center St. 

Revere: 

Ingleside Home.. 

148 Prospect Ave. 

Salem: 

Salem Seamen’s Children’s Home.. 

7 Carpenter St. 

Springfield: 

Springfield Home for Friendless Women 
andChildren(Children’sDepartment).' 1 
37 Buckingham St. 

Taunton: 

Bethlehem Home. 

71 Summer St. 

Wellesley Hills: 

Convalescent Home of the Children’s 
Hospital. 

Forest St. 

Westfield: 

Shurtleff Mission to the Children of the 
Destitute. 

Franklin St. 

Worcester: 

Orphanage of Our Lady of Mercy. 

46 High St. 

St. Ann’s French Canadian Orphanage. 
73 Granite St. 


MICHIGAN. 

Assinins: 

St. Joseph’s Asylum. 

Battle Creek: 

Haskell Home. 

156 Hubbard St. 

Bay City: 

Children’s Home. 

1800 Columbus Ave. 
Lutheran Children’s Home. 
1203 Tenth St. 


Supervised or conducted by— 


Private corporation. 


Society of St. John the Evan¬ 
gelist. 


Sisters of Providence. 
Sisters of Providence. 
Private corporation.. 


Ladies’ Union 
Society. 

Sisters of Charity 
Nuns). 

Private corporation. 


Charitable 
(Grey 


Private corporation. 
Private corporation. 


Sisters of Charity. 

Sisters of Charity of Nazareth 

St. Anne’s Church (Episco¬ 
pal). 

Volunteers of America.. 


Xaverian Brothers. 


Sisters of Charity of Nazareth 

Private corporation. 

Xaverian Brothers. 


Woman’s Baptist Foreign 
Missionary Society. 

Private corporation.. 


Private corporation. 
Private corporation. 


Sisters of Mercy. 

Children’s Hospital (Boston) 

Private corporation. 


Sisters of Our Lady of Mercy. 

Sisters of Charity (Grey 
Nuns). 


Sisters of St. Agnes.. 
Private corporation. 


Private corporation.. 
Synodical Conference. 


Class of children received. 


Needy children. 


Orphan children. 


Infants and orphan and des¬ 
titute boys under 14. 
Orphan girls. 


Destitute cripples under 12. 


Orphan and neglected girls 
from 2 to 12. 

Orphan, abandoned, and 
needy children. 


Orphan children. 


Homeless and neglected chil¬ 
dren. 

Orphan, neglected, and des¬ 
titute children. 

Orphan children. 

Orphan girls from 4 to 14.... 


Orphan boys from 2 to 5. 
Needy children. 


Orphan, incorrigible, and 
destitute boys. 

Orphan children.. 


Destitute girls.. 

and neglected 


Wayward 

boys. 


Foreign missionaries’ 
dren. 


chil- 


Wayward girls from 13 to 18. 


Destitute children. 


Orphan and destitute chil¬ 
dren. 


Orphan and neglected chil¬ 
dren under 2. 

Convalescent children. 


Destitute children from 3 to 9 


Orphan, neglected, and 
abandoned children. 
Homeless children from 3 to 
12 . 


1 Not reported. 


> Colored only. 


Orphan children. 

rpl 
dren. 


Homeless and destitute chil¬ 
dren. 

Orphan, homeless, and neg¬ 
lected children. 

J Exclusive of summer visitors. 


*o 

a 

3 

o 


1896 

1901 

1892 

1881 

1894 

1875 

1868 

1902 

1902 

1883 

1908 
1877 

1875 
1901 
1900 

1892 

1872 

1883 

1879 

1896 

1839 

1865 

1909 

1869 

•1895 

1876 
1891 

1843 

1894 

1886 

1899 


■a 


TS 

33 

.3 

o 

•d 

4> 

c 

_o 

"o 

O 


Yes. 

<*) 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

No. 

Yes. 

No. 

Yes. 

No. 

No. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

No. 

No. 

Yes. 

No. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

(0 

Yes. 

No. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

No. 

No. 


Number of cottages. 

Paid employees at close of year. 

CHILDREN RECEIVED FOR FIRST 
TIME IN 1910. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Through— 

Public officials. 

Officials of the 

institution. 

Child-placing 

societies. 

R elatives or 

friends of child. 

Other agencies. 


3 

23 

17 

6 




12 

11 

2 

o 

3 22 

0) 

C 1 ) 

2 




20 

.... 

6 

319 

247 

72 

11 

. . - . 

42 

266 

.... 

.... 

3 

108 

.... 

108 

6 

.... 

28 

74 

.... 


ID 

ID 

5 

5 




9 

1 


4 

9 


9 

2 




7 


23 

159 

73 

86 




159 



6 

20 

9 

11 




20 



5 

125 

65 

60 

0) 

(0 

(>) 

0) 

C 1 ) 



1 

1 





1 



4 

124 

42 

82 




124 



10 



45 




33 

12 


5 

1 

1 





1 



9 

10 

5 

5 




10 



8 

54 

54 


4 



50 



25 

8 

17 




25 



2 










6 

198 

198 





198 



5 

6 

4 

2 




6 



5 

5 


5 




5 




13 

8 

5 




13 


.... 

13 

46 

15 

31 

.... 

3 

.... 

43 

.... 


4 

22 

12 

10 

5 

17 





24 

902 

(') 

(i) 




902 



3 

7 

3 

4 




7 



4 

72 

39 

33 




61 

11 


23 

240 

120 

120 




240 



11 

42 

20 

22 




42 



8 

23 

20 

3 




23 



7 

57 

41 

16 




51 

6 

.... 

2 

7 

3 

4 

1 



6 



Women received at 136 William St. 









































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


113 


CARE OF CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


CHILDREN IN THE 
CLOSE OF 

INSTITUTION 

YEAR. 

AT 

CHILDREN 
OUTSIDE BUT 
UNDER 
SUPERVISION. 

CHILDREN 
PLACED IN 
FAMILIES 
DURING 
YEAR. 

• 

CHILDREN 
DISCHARGED 
DURING YEAR. 

RECEIPTS 

DURING YEAR. 


PAYMENTS DURING 
YEAR. 

VALUE OF 
PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Total. 

<6 

Is 

a 

Female. 

Dependent. 

Working boys or girls. | 

Delinquent. 

Total. 

Derived from— 

Orphans and 
foundlings. 

Invalid or defec¬ 
tive. 

All other. 

o 

© 

•a 

a 

Female. 

*3 

o 

© 

•a 

a 

Female. 

*3 

O 

Eh 

© 

*3 

a 

Female. 

Ap- 

pro- 

pria- 

tions. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources 

Total. 

For 

run¬ 

ning 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total 

(includ¬ 

ing 

invested 

funds). 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

11 

8 

3 

4 


7 



2 

i 

1 

2 

i 

1 

23 

16 

7 

$1,06? 


$671 

$331 

$65 

$1,444 

$1,444 


P) 

0) 

23 

11 

4 

7 

11 














2,300 


1,700 

214 

386 

2,300 

1,800 

$500 

$5,000 

$5,000 

24 

181 

179 

2 

155 


22 


4 







306 

306 


30,200 


8,096 

17,711 

4,393 

30,162 

23,535 

6,627 

’ 100,000 

100,000 

25 

127 


127 

127 





14 


14 

14 


14 

59 


59 

9,491 


547 

8,944 

9,452 

9,452 

50,000 

50,000 

26 

30 

15 

15 


30 










7 

4 

3 

12,852 


3,925 

302 

8,625 

12,716 

9,905 

2,811 

116,000 

36,000 

27 

19 


19 

12 


7 


\ 




3 


3 

8 


8 

2,480 


344 

1,326 

810 

2,480 

2,380 

100 

17,620 

15,934 

28 

383 

171 

212 

126 


257 









141 

56 

85 

18,764 


2,901 

14,039 

1,824 

15,822 

13,171 

2,651 

114,600 

114,600 

29 

30 

13 

17 

30 











11 

6 

5 

6,310 


5,256 

774 

280 

4,575 

4,575 

22,000 

17,000 

30 

41 

0) 

0) 

0) 

(■) 

(i) 

0) 

C 1 ) 

(>> 

(>) 

C 1 ) 




0) 

0) 

0) 

1,978 


305 

1,673 


• 

1,640 

1,243 

397 

0) 

P) 

31 

13 

10 

3 

12 

1 




4 

3 

1 

2,254 


0) 

( 1 ) 

0) 

2,249 

2,249 


7,500 

7,000 

32 

117 

42 

75 

117 











19 

4 

15 

10,613 

$25 

1,481 

5,767 

3,340 

9,627 

9,128 

499 

75,000 

75,000 

33 

66 


66 

65 

1 




12 


12 

12 


12 

38 


38 

5,805 

1,735 

3,353 

717 

7,574 

4,574 

3,000 

29,500 

4,500 

34 

8 

8 


8 











3 

3 


2,485 


668 

1,817 

1,791 

1,791 

50,469 

25,500 

35 

18 

7 

11 

8 


10 









13 

8 

5 

2,814 


2,221 

558 

35 

3,131 

3,131 


5,000 

5,000 

36 

99 

99 


71 




28 

1 

i 


2 

2 


48 

48 


11,464 


738 

3,409 

7,317 

11,449 

10,094 

1,355 

18,000 

18,000 

37 

30 

11 

19 

30 






• 





24 

10 

14 

1,381 



1,381 


1,320 

1,320 


( 1 ) 

( l ) 

38 

12 

12 

11 


1 



3 


3 




1 


1 

2,727 


1,432 

139 

1,156 

3,347 

2,578 

769 

37,281 

10,000 

39 

94 

94 

30 


49 


15 







126 

126 


30,242 


4,537 

6,215 

19,490 

27,766 

26,744 

1,022 

150,000 

150,000 

40 

25 

11 

14 

25 














0) 


0) 

0) 

P) 

0) 

P) 


P) 

(>) 

41 

14 

14 





14 







0) 


(!) 

9,608 


8,637 

826 

145 

4,048 

4,048 


10,085 

3,000 

42 

44 

10 

34 

44 




4 


4 

2 


2 

21 

9 

12 

8,007 


1,266 

6,741 

7,406 

7,406 


143,032 

22,700 

43 

37 

16 

21 

2 


35 



2 

i 

1 

5 

3 

2 

47 

20 

27 

( 5 ) 


(*) 

( 5 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 5 ) 

( 5 ) 


( 6 ) 

(») 

44 

or 

14 

11 

25 










30 

17 

13 

7,452 


6,597 

855 


7,321 

7,321 

11,000 

11,000 

45 

m 

fl\ 



m 

rn 

(i\ 








0) 

0) 

0) 

28,812 


10,077 

3,473 

15,262 

28,001 

28,001 


319,351 

117,424 

46 

w 

10 

w 

R 

^ ) 

\ J 

1 

v ) 

V. ) 

9 

v / 








8 

4 

4 

2,571 


282 

432 

1,857 

2,297 

2,114 

183 

31,240 

6,654 

47 

120 

66 

54 

89 


31 






5 


5 

106 

60 

46 

e 19,992 


5,879 

9,630 

4,483 

6 12,563 

11,380 

1,183 

6 117,925 

106,300 

48 

910 

120 

120 

208 


32 









124 

53 

71 

P) 

P) 

P) 

( l ) 

0) 

19,743 

19, 743 


C 1 ) 

& 

49 

QQ 

40 

4S 

88 







18 

8 

10 




9,800 


8,000 

1,800 


9,800 

9,800 


50,000 

50,000 

1 


27 

11 

17 

1 

20 






3 

2. 

1 

1 

1 


4,516 


122 

467 

3,927 

4,816 

4,549 

267 

55,629 

31,694 

2 

13 

Q 

4 

12 

1 









36 

26 

10 

2,273 

600 

395 

1,093 

185 

3,200 

3,000 

200 

20,000 

15,000 

3 

13 

5 

8 

2 

1 

9 

— 

1 

55 

36 

19 

16 

9 

7 

1 

.... 

1 

( 7 ) 


( 7 ) 



( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

•?. 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

4 


& Included in report of adult department. 


«Includes report of St. Joseph’s Home for Business Girls. 7 Included in report of the Lutheran Children’s Friend Society. 


44153°—14-8 




























































































































































































Institution number. 


114 BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table I.— INSTITUTIONS FOR THE 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


Supervised or conducted by— 


Class of children received. 


MICHIG AN—Continued. 


Boyne City: 

5 Beulah Land Farm for Boys 
Cold water: 

6 State Public School. 


Private organization 


State of Michigan 


7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 


Detroit: 

Felician Sisters’ Home for Orphans 
St. Aubin Ave. 

Home of the Friendless. 

33 Warren Ave. west. 

Protestant Orphan Asylum. 

988 Jefferson Ave. 

St. Agnes’s Home for Girls. 

206 Horton Ave. 

St. Vincent’s Orphan Asylum. 

137 McDougall Ave. ' 
Farmington: 

Ford Republic.,.. 


13 

14 

15 

16 


Grand Rapids: 

D. A. Blodgett Home for Children 
66 Cherry St. 

St. John’s Home. 

163 East Leonard St. 
Highland Park: 

St. Francis Home. 

3190 Woodward Ave. 

Holt: 

Rocky Beach Orphanage. 


Felician Sisters.. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Girls’ Friendly Society 
(Episcopal). 

Sisters of Charity. 

Boys’ Home and D’Arcam- 
bal Association. 

Private corporation.. 

Sisters of St. Dominic.. 

Sisters of St. Joseph. 

Private corporation. 


17 

18 
19 


20 

21 

22 

23 

24 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 


Houghton: 

Good Will Farm 


Private corporation 


Kalamazoo: 

Children’s Home. Private corporation 

901 South West St. 

Juvenile Detention Home. Juvenile Court. 

819 Clinton Ave. 


Muskegon: 

Muskegon Children’s Home. 

248 Terrace St. 

Owosso: 

Dorcas Home. 

800 North Hickory St. 
Saginaw: 

Home for the Friendless. 

Howard and McCosky Aves. 

St. Vincent’s Orphan Home. 

160 Howard St. 

St. Joseph: 

Receiving Home. 

1424 South State St. 


Muskegon Humane Union.. 
Private corporation. 


Private corporation 
Sisters of Charity... 


Michigan Children’s Home 
Society. 


MINNESOTA. 

Duluth: 

Children’s Home. 

Fifteenth Ave. east and Fifth St. 

St. James’s Orphan Home. 

Woodland St. 

Lake Park: 

Lake Park Orphans’ Home. 

Little Falls: 

St. Otto’s Orphanage. 

Second St. 

Mankato: 

Sacred Heart Home. 

827 South Baker Ave. 

Minneapolis: 

Catholic Orphan Asylum. 

Chicago Ave. and Forty-sixth St. 

Sheltering Arms. 

Forty-fourth St. and Riverside 
Boulevard. 

Washburn Memorial Orphan Asylum.. 
Nicollet Ave. and Fiftieth St. 

Minnetonka Beach: 

Glen Lake Farm School for Boys. 

Hopkins P. O. 

Owatonna: 

State Public School. 

State Ave. 


Private corporation. 

Sisters of St. Benedict. 

United Norwegian Lutheran 
Church. 

Franciscan Sisters of the Im¬ 
maculate Conception. 

Calced Carmelite Nuns. 

Sisters of St. Joseph. 

Private corporation (Episco¬ 
pal). 

Private corporation. 

County of Hennepin. 

State of Minnesota. 


Homeless and neglected 
boys. 

Dependent, ill-treated, and 
neglected children under 
14. 

Orphan and indigent girls... 

Orphan and homeless chil¬ 
dren. 

Orphan and destitute chil¬ 
dren from 2 to 12. 

Orphan, delinquent, and 
neglected girls. 

Orphan and destitute girls.. 


Delinquent and homeless 
boys. 

Foundlings, orphan and 
homeless children. 

Orphan and neglected chil¬ 
dren from 3 to 16. 

Orphan boys. 


Orphan, abandoned, and il¬ 
legitimate children under 
14. 

Dependent and homeless 
children. 

Homeless girls from 5 to 14.. 

Dependent and delinquent 
children pending court ac¬ 
tion. 

Orphan, neglected, and de¬ 
pendent children. 

Homeless and delinquent 
children. 

Friendless and indigent chil¬ 
dren. 

Orphan and homeless chil¬ 
dren. 

Curable, physically defec¬ 
tive, and dependent chil¬ 
dren under 12. 


Orphan and needy children. 

Catholic orphan children.... 

Orphan and dependent chil¬ 
dren. 

Orphan and homeless chil¬ 
dren. 

Destitute orphan children... 

Orphan and dependent boys. 

Orphan and destitute chil¬ 
dren. 

Orphan children. 

Delinquent boys. 

Dependent and neglected 
children. 


Year founded. 

Colored children received. 

Number of cottages. 

Paid employees at close of year. 

CHILDREN RECEIVED FOR 
TIME IN 1910. 

FIRST 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Through— 

Public officials. 

Officials of the 

institution. 

Child-placing 

societies. 

Relatives or 

friends of child. 

Other agencies. 

1R98 

No. 


5 

58 

58 


3 



55 


1871 

Yes. 

29 

50 

289 

163 

126 

2S9 





1882 

No. 

65 

65 

1 



64 


18G2 

No. 


11 

111 

58 

53 




100 

11 

1836 

Yes. 


14 

64 

39 

25 




64 


1909 

No. 

1 

2 

9 


9 

1 

2 

2 

4 

.... 

1851 

Yes. 


3 

109 


109 

6 



103 


1903 

Yes. 

— 

8 

147 

147 


140 

3 

.... 

4 

... . 

1887 

Yes. 

- . . . 

22 

180 

105 

75 

8 

. . - . 

4 

166 

2 

1888 

No. 



40 

25 





40 


1828 

Yes. 


2 

232 

232 




232 



1890 

Yes. 

4 

4 

12 

5 

7 




12 


1899 

Yes. 


12 

50 

21 

29 

3 



47 


1867 

No. 


4 

22 


22 




22 


1908 

Yes. 

• 

2 

34 

8 

26 

34 





1887 

No. 


9 

60 

24 

36 




60 


1897 

No. 

.... 

3 

13 

5 

8 

2 

4 

.... 

7 

.... 

1871 

Yes. 

.... 

10 

202 

98 

104 

0) 

1 

. - . . 

0) 

1 


Yes. 


1 

3 

2 

1 




3 


1892 

Yes. 

.... 

7 

122 

63 

59 

70 

15 

8 

24 

5 

1883 

Yes. 


13 

97 

61 

36 

40 



57 


1900 

No. 


12 

154 

74 

80 

5 



149 


1895 

No. 


8 

7 

3 

4 

3 



4 


1895 

Yes. 

.... 

3 

34 

12 

22 

1 

3 

. .. . 

30 

. . . . 

1879 

No. 


3 

3 

3 





3 


1878 

Yes. 


5 

69 

69 


12 



57 


1880 

Yes. 


12 

76 

(l) 

( i ) 




76 


1883 

Yes. 


21 

13 

7 

6 

13 





1907 

Yes. 

1 

5 

85 

85 


85 





1885 

Yes. 

7 

51 

239 

137 

102 

239 






1 Not reported. 2 Only 8 occupied. 3 Exclusive of donations other than cash. * Includes amount paid-by diocese for salaries, fuel, and improvements. 
































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


115 


CARE OF CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


CHILDREN IN THE 
CLOSE OF 

INSTITUTION 

YEAR. 

AT 

CHILDREN 
OUTSIDE BUT 
UNDER 
SUPERVISION. 

CHILDREN 
PLACED IN 

FA MILIES 
DURING 
YEAR. 

CHILDREN 
DISCHARGED 
DURING YEAR. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Dependent. 

Working boys or girls. 

Delinquent. 

Orphans and 
foundlings. 

Invalid or defec¬ 
tive. 

All other. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

32 

32 


18 


14 









50 

50 


197 

143 

54 

83 


114 



1438 

906 

532 

389 

199 

190 

28 

16 

12 

79 


79 

64 


15 



2 


2 

34 


34 

1 


1 

66 

33 

33 

65 


1 



2 

1 

1 

2 

1 

1 

47 

(!) 

(i) 

106 

(»> 

( : ) 

76 


30 



10 

C 1 ) 

(i) 

10 

(») 


79 

49 

30 

13 

13 

6 

1 


2 

4 

5 

5 


4 


4 

200 


200 

100 


100 









83 


83 

150 

150 




7 


143 

24 

24 


19 

19 


125 

125 


77 

42 

35 

29 

2 

41 


5 

26 

14 

12 

7 

5 

2 

116 

68 

48 

148 

76 

72 

11 


137 



22 

10 

12 







278 

278 


278 











292 

292 


10 

6 

4 

10 





281 

142 

139 

10 

4 

6 




33 

17 

16 

18 


15 



58 

29 

29 

25 

14 

11 

41 

18 

23 

(>) 


C 1 ) 



C 1 ) 






3 


3 

14 


14 

8 

2 

6 



3 


5 







48 

14 

34 

96 

40 

56 

31 

1 

5 64 



6 

3 

3 

9 

(i) 

( l ) 

37 

0) 

0) 

10 

9 

1 



5 


5 




7 

6 

1 

10 


5 

59 

(l) 

m 

7 

3 

49 



1 

1 





139 

71 

68 

120 

40 

\ / 

80 

120 




18 


11 




(l) 

0) 

0) 

34 

23 

11 

8 

4 

22 



383 

200 

1S3 

(») 

(*) 

C 1 ) 

23 

13 

10 

90 

54 

36 

88 

2 







70 

42 

28 

254 

134 

120 

251 

1 



2 

76 

60 

16 

25 

11 

14 

71 

41 

30 

93 

58 

35 

91 

2 




1 


1 

2 

1 

1 

6 

4 

2 

93 

52 

41 

73 


18 

.... 

2 

35 

15 

20 

18 

10 

8 

22 

13 

9 

16 

12 

4 

16 











2 

2 


113 

113 


72 

5 

24 


12 

42 

42 


12 

12 


52 

52 

.... 

67 

36 

31 

67 





(l) 

(l) 

(i) 




4 

0) 

0) 

93 

54 

39 

93 





22 

8 

14 

24 

13 

11 

1 

1 


24 

24 




24 







(!) 

0) 


232 

167 

65 

108 

.... 

124 



1307 

733 

574 

402 

204 

198 

11 

4 

7 


RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 


Total. 


$3,928 

46,751 

3 2,800 
12,240 
15,324 
2,285 
( l > 

15,319 


12,003 


8,000 


9,860 

179 

11,193 

C 1 ) 

2,694 

4,792 

3,035 

9,178 

( 1 ) 

( 6 ) 

11,966 


4,340 


11,025 


5,000 


11,394 


6,838 


9,072 


25,359 


15,000 


85,108 


Derived from— 


Ap¬ 

pro* 

pria- 

tions. 


$40,500 


3$2,800 
4,198 
2,860 
2,285 


3,000 


4,435 


0) 


2,694 


535 


( 6 ) 


450 


688 


0) 


15,000 


84,319 


Dona* 

tions. 


( 1 ) 


2,430 


5,000 


5,860 


179 


8,154 


0) 


61 


1,000 


80 


0) 


( 6 ) 


3,084 

2.420 

8.420 


Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 


0) 


Other 

sources 


$6,251 


$3,195 


3,927 


0) 


161 


3,705 


3,000 


2,236 


C 1 ) 


304 

1,000 

2,119 

C 1 ) 
( 6 ) 


5,219 


1,920 


574 


4,500 500 


2,329 


6,838 

0) 


0) 


4,847 


8,537 


C 1 ) 


10,723 


5,868 


4,000 


803 


0 ) 


4,427 
500 
6,979 

C 1 ) 

( 6 ) 


3,213 


1,343 


9,065 


0 ) 


25,359 


789 


PAYMENTS DURING 
YEAR. 

VALUE OF 
PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR, 

Institution number. 

1 ‘ 

Total. 

For 

run¬ 

ning 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total 

(includ¬ 

ing 

invested 

funds). 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

$3,928 

$3,928 


$8,000 

$8,000 

5 

46,711 

46,211 

$500 

282,279 

281,279 

6 

3 2,800 

3 2,800 


60,000 

60,000 

7 

11,006 

10,004 

1,002 

138,000 

50,000 

8 

13,416 

11,443 

1,973 

147,714 

50,000 

9 

2,285 

2,285 




10 

13,000 

13,000 


50,000 

50,000 

11 

15,799 

15,616 

183 

55,415 

55,415 

12 

11,450 

11,317 

133 

238,194 

157,025 

13 

4,900 

2,400 

2,500 

75,000 

75,000 

14 

* 22,000 

420,000 

2,000 

215,000 

215,000 

15 

200 

200 




16 

10,886 

10,144 

742 

15,000 

15,000 

17 

0) 

(>) 

(») 

o) 

(>) 

18 

2,694 

2,694 




19 

5,195 

4,370 

825 

151,000 

15,000 

20 

3,100 

2,600 

500 

5,000 

5,000 

21 

7,688 

7,688 


101,964 

25,000 

22 

(>) 

(■) 


C 1 ) 

c) 

23 

(«) 

(«) 


(«) 

(«) 

24 

11,098 

10,669 

429 

54,300 

50,000 

1 

6,584 

4,856 

1,728 

175,000 

175,000 

2 

19,000 

10,000 

9,000 

50,000 

47,000 

3 

4,500 

4,500 


30,000 

30,000 

4 

13,307 

6,761 

6,546 

40,000 

40,000 

5 

6,388 

5,888 

500 

141,000 

141,000 

6 

7,994 

7,994 


(») 

(>) 

7 

24,635 

23,929 

706 

615,923 

141,686 

8 

15,000 

« 

o 

28,000 

28,000 

9 

78,686 

59,933 

18,753 

293,533 

293,533 

10 


6 Includes 53 boarders, 


• Included iD report of the Michigan Children’s Home Society. 





















































































































































































116 BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table I.— INSTITUTIONS FOR THE 


2 


n 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 


10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


MINNESOTA—Continued. 

St. Paul: 

Catholic Orphan Asylum.. 

933 Carroll St. 

Protestant Orphan Asylum. 

670 Marshall Ave.' 

St. Joseph’s German Catholic Orphan 
Asylum. 

Randolph St. 

Twin Vallet: 

Wild Rice Orphanage.. 


Vasa: 

Vasa Orphans’ Home. 


Wabasha: 

St. Joseph’s Orphanage. 


MISSISSIPPI. 

Columbus: 

Palmer Orphanage. 


Jackson: 

Methodist Orphanage. 

West St. 

Mississippi Baptist Orphanage. 

Bailey Ave. 

Mekidian: 

Masonic Orphans’ Home. 

Twenty-third Ave. and Twenty- 
fifth St. 

Natchez: 

Devereux Hall Asylum.. 

Protestant Orphan Asylum. 

North Union St. 

St. Mary’s Female Orphan Asylum_ 

Jefferson and Rankin Sts. 

MISSOURI. 

Conception: 

St. James’ Industrial School.. 

Des Peres: 

German Lutheran Orphan Home. 

Webster Groves, R. D. 5. 

Kansas City: 

Detention Home.. 

514 Oak St. 

Gillis Orphans’ Home. 

Twenty-second St. and Tracy Ave. 

Kansas City Boys’ Orphan Home. 

922 Westport Ave. 

St. Anthony’s Home for Infants. 

Twenty-third St. and College Ave. 

St. Joseph’s Orphan Home... 

Thirty-first and Jefferson Sts. 

Nevada: 

St. Francis Academy..»._ 

R. D. 1, Box 2. 

Normandy: 

St. Frances Orphan Asylum. 


Pattontm.le: 

Baptist Orphans’ Home. 

St. Louis P. O. 

St. Joseph: 

Home for Little Wanderers. 

801 North Twenty-eighth St. 

North Western Colored Orphanage. 

1816 South Sixth St. 

Sheltering Arms of St. Joseph. 

Main and Pauline Sts. 

St. Louis: 

Bethesda Foundling Home.. 

3651 Vista Ave. 

Christian Orphans’ Home. 

2951 North Euclid Ave. 

German General Protestant Orphans’ 
Home*. 

4447 Natural Bridge Road. 

German Protestant Orphans’ Home.... 

St. Charles Rock Road (Wellston). 
German St. Vincent’s Orphans’ Home.. 
1421 Hogan St. 

Girls’ Industrial Home.. 

5501 Von Versen Ave. 

Methodist Orphans’ Home 7 . 

4385 Maryland Ave. 


Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of children received. 

Year founded. 

Colored children received. 

N umber of cottages. 

Paid employees at close of year. 

Sisters of St. Joseph. 

Orphan and abandoned girls. 

1860 

Yes. 


3 

Private corporation.. 

Orphan children. 

1865 

No. 


11 

Private corporation. 

Orphan children. 

1877 

No. 


16 

Norwegian Lutheran Synod. 

Dependent, indigent, and 

1898 

Yes. 


7 


neglected children. 





Swedish Lutheran (Augus- 

Orphan children. 

1865 

Yes. 

2 1 

8 

tana Synod). 






Sisters of the Sorrowful 

Orphan and neglected chil- 

1908 

Yes. 


1 

Mother. 

dren. 





Presbyterian Synods of 

Destitute orphan children... 

1898 

No. 

3 

8 

Louisiana and Mississippi. 






Methodist Episcopal Church, 

Destitute orphan children, 

1898 

No. 


12 

South. 

from 2 to 11. 





Private corporation (Bap- 

Orphan children. 

1893 

No. 


10 

tist). 






Masonic Grand Lodge of 

Masons’ orphan children, 

1908 

No. 


9 

Mississippi. 

from 2 to 14. 





Brothers of the Sacred Heart. 

Orphan boys, from 2 to 14. . 

1865 

No. 



Private organization. 

Orphan and'destitute chil- 

1816 

No. 


5 


dren. 





Sisters of Charity (St. Vin- 

Orphan, abandoned, and 

1846 

No. 


2 

cent de Paul). 

destitute girls. 





Benedictine Sisters. 

Orphan girls from 2 to 16.... 

1892 

No. 



Private corporation. 

Orphan children. 

1868 

No. 


12 

County of Jackson. 

Delinquent children, under 

1906 

Yes. 


3 


17, pending trial. 





W Oman’s Christian Associa- 

Orphan children. 

1870 

No. 


11 

tion. 






Sisters of Charity. 

Orphan boys. 

1897 

No. 


4 

Sisters of Charity. 

Orphan, destitute, and aban- 

1899 

Yes. 


14 


donea children under 2. 





Sisters of St. Joseph. 

Orphan and neglected girls.. 

1879 

No. 

.... 

1 

Sisters of St. Francis. 

Indigent children. 

1893 

No. 



Oblate Sisters of Providence. 

Orphan, destitute, and aban- 

1882 

P) 


1 


doned girls, from 3 to 12. 





Missouri Baptist General As- 

Orphan and indigent chil- 

1886 

No. 

4 

8 

sociation. 

dren. 





Ladies’ Union Benevolent 

Orphan and homeless chil- 

1894 

No. 


6 

Association. 

dren over 2. 





Private corporation. 

Orphan and dependent chil- 

1903 

Yes. 

2 

. . . . 


dren. 





Private corporation. 

Foundlings, and orphan and 

1906 

No. 


7 


homeless children. 





Private corporation. 

Foundlings and orphan chil- 

1889 

No. 


8 


dren under 3. 





National Benevolent Associ- 

Orphan children under 12... 

1889 

No. 


25 

ation of Christian Church. 






Private corporation. 

Orphan children under 14... 

1877 

No. 

.... 

6 

German Evangelical 

Orphan children. 

1858 

No. 


16 

churches. 






Sisters of Christian Charity.. 

Orphan children from 2 to 14. 

1850 

No. 

.... 

2 

Private corporation. 

Orphan and destitute girls... 

1854 

No. 

.... 

6 

Methodist Episcopal Church, 

Destitute orphan children... 

1867 

No. 


33 

South. 







children received for first 
TIME IN 1910. 


Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

I 

313 


313 

26 

12 

14 

36 

21 

15 

20 

8 

12 

9 

5 

4 

13 

6 

7 

6 

2 

4 

36 

15 

21 

48 

22 

26 

21 

9 

12 

14 

14 


P) 

C 1 ) 

( l ) 

12 

.... 

12 

10 


10 

27 

12 

15 

,102 

P) 

P) 

48 

28 

20 

120 

120 


117 

64 

53 

250 

.... 

250 

123 

57 

66 

15 

.... 

15 

57 

P) 

( l ) 

P) 

P) 

P) 

42 

20 

22 

39 

20 

19 

205 

80 

125 

108 

67 

41 

22 

11 

11 

70 

38 

32 

38 

23 

15 

25 

.... 

25 

111 

54 

57 


Through- 


Public officials. 

Officials of the 

institution. 

Child-placing 

societies. 

Relatives or 

friends of child. 

Other agencies. 




313 


6 



20 


i 



35 



20 






9 





13 





6 





36 




2 

46 





21 





14 





(i) 





12 





10 





27 


294 

9 


363 

436 

2 


46 





120 


6 



76 

35 




250 





123 



15 







53 

4 

P) 

P) 

P) 

P) 

0) 


42 







15 

24 

32 

168 

5 






94 

14 




22 





70 





38 





25 





111 








Not reported. 


2 In addition to main building. 


3 Exclusive of income from farm and wood shop. 


i Includes report of Maternity Hospital. 


I 


l 


































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


117 


CARE OF CHILDREN: 1910 —Continued. 


CHILDREN IN THE INSTITUTION 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

AT 

CHILDREN 
OUTSIDE BUT 
UNDER 
SUPERVISION. 

CHILDREN 
PLACED IN 
FAMILIES 
DURING 
YEAR. 

Total. 

---- 

Male. 

Female. 

Dependent. 

Working boys or girls. 

Delinquent. 

Orphans and 
foundlings. 

Invalid or defec¬ 
tive. 

•All other. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

117 


117 

117 











48 

28 

20 

48 











121 

61 

60 

85 

.... 

16 

.... 

20 

24 

10 

14 

31 

18 

13 

80 

45 

35 

72 

1 



7 

40 

13 

27 




65 

43 

22 

61 

4 




4 

4 





63 

33 

30 

42 

2 

19 



10 

7 

3 

10 

7 

3 

61 

21 

40 

61 











163 

63 

100 

163 








11 

5 

6 

194 

81 

113 

194 











73 

24 

49 

73 











44 

44 


44 











30 

(>) 

(i) 

30 





C 1 ) 

(>) 

0) 

(') 

0) 

o) 

68 

68 

68 







k 












43 


43 

43 











115 

69 

46 

115 





5 

5 


5 

5 


4 

2 

2 





4 

558 

391 

167 

149 

72 

77 

83 

43 

40 

83 





6 

2 

4 




112 

112 


112 











35 

25 

10 

23 



12 


21 

10 

11 

16 

7 

9 

150 


150 

(*) 


0) 









80 

30 

50 


80 









64 

64 

54 


10 



8 


8 

1 


1 

91 


0) 

87 

4 




2 

1 

1 




50 

30 

20 

50 





0) 

(!) 

(!) 

c) 

(>) 

(>) 

24 

10 

14 

12 


12 



80 

30 

50 

44 

24 

20 

22 


22 









98 

1 42 

56 

98 











150 

72 

78 

150 





211 

105 

106 

38 

20 

18 

82 

37 

45 

82 











230 

135 

95 

230 





13 

13 





238 

140 

98 

238 





19 

6 

13 

1 


1 

85 


85 

o 

0) 

(•) 

(>) 

(*) 

10 


10 




130 

73 

57 

130 





? 

3 

.... 

4 

3 

1 


CHILDREN 
DISCHARGED 
DURING YEAR. 

R] 

Total. 

ECEIPTS 

DURING YEAR. 

Derived from— 


PAYMENTS DURING 
YEAR. 

VALUE OF 
PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Total. 

0) 

6 

03 

a 

<v 

Ap- 

pro- 

pria- 

tions. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources 

Total. 

For 

run¬ 

ning 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total 

(includ¬ 

ing 

invested 

funds). 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

320 


320 

(l) 


(i) 

$290 

$500 

$3,000 

$3,000 


0) 

(i) 

11 

25 

11 

14 

$9,800 


$7,500 

1,050 

1,250 

8,800 

8,000 

$800 

o) 

$75,000 

12 

8 

6 

2 

10,100 


2,000 

2,800 

5,300 

11,300 

10,500 

800 

$100,000 

100,000 

13 

9 

5 

4 

15,488 

$188 

15,000 

300 


15,488 

9,000 

6,488 

46,500 

45,000 

14 

15 

8 

7 

16,816 


100 

584 

16,132 

13,123 

9,045 

4,078 

28,000 

28,000 

15 




4,924 


4,924 



4,842 

4,842 


72,000 

50,000 

16 




7,000 


7,000 



7,000 

6,000 

1,000 

25,000 

25,000 

1 

2 


2 

45,502 


45,502 



45,502 

14,563 

30,939 

130,000 

130,000 

2 

3 

2 

1 

319,260 


18,260 


1,000 

26,260 

10,260 

16,000 

125,000 

125,000 

3 

4 

3 

1 

30,037 


24,605 


5,432 

21,749 

9,242 

12,507 

157,032 

64,682 

4 

22 

22 


4,331 


2,544 

617 

1,170 

3,963 

3,963 

i 

60,000 

60,000 

5 

0) 

c) 

0) 

(1) 


0) 


(i) 

(i) 

0) 

(*) 

0) 

oj 

6 

16 

16 

3,617 


575 

412 

2,630 

3,581 

3,581 

20,000 

20,000 

7 

6 


6 

0) 

* 

(>) 

( i ) 

(>) 

0) 

o) 

0) 

c) 

(0 

1 

28 

18 

10 

11,400 


5,837 

1,948 

3,615 

10,400 

10,400 


50,000 

50,000 

2 

212 

211 

1 

13,680 

13,680 


13,680 

13,680 


(i) 

0) 

3 

18 

0) 

0) 

11,603 

340 

2,411 

8,852 

13,732 

13,732 


115,833 

60,833 

4 

126 

126 


8,000 


1,000 

4,000 

3,000 

8,000 

6,000 

2,000 

15,000 

15,000 

5 

110 

58 

52 

* 9,461 


3,705 

2,952 

2,804 

< 8,776 

8,597 

179 

<75,300 

75,300 

6 

C 1 ) 


(>) 

5,500 


(i) 

0) 


5,500 

5,500 


0) 

0) 

7 


5,202 


200 

5,002 


5,157 

5,071 

86 

25,000 

25,000 

8 

7 

.... 

i 

0) 


(>) 

480 

350 

4,699 

4,199 

500 

14,000 

14,000 

9 

45 

0) 

0) 

21,010 


17,995 

1,890 

1,125 

21,010 

9,174 

11,836 

125,344 

95,000 

10 

0) 

0) 

(*) 

5,172 


241 

727 

4,204 

4, 204 

4,204 


c) 

0) 

11 

8 

8 

16,200 


15,000 

300 

900 

( l ) 

0) 


12 

31 

18 

13 

5,750 


5,120 

630 


4,911 

4,418 

493 

9,000 

9,000 

13 

50 

10 

40 

(a) 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 


(«) 

( 6 ) 


52,000 

52,000 

14 

102 

57 

45 

14,184 

8,804 

3,786 

1,594 

13,818 

12,902 

916 

135,000 

135,000 

15 

23 

11 

12 

12,506 


5,178 

1,500 

5,828 

13,413 

9,561 

3,852 

135,000 

75,000 

16 

5 

• • • • 

5 

21,400 


4,500 

6,900 

10,000 

20,000 

18,000 

2,000 

300,000 

300,000 

17 

29 

14 

15 

18,944 


3,699 

1,235 

14,010 

13,775 

13,775 


0) 

40,000 

18 

24 


24 

7,900 


2,500 

1,000 

4,400 

7,843 

7,843 


130,000 

75,000 

19 

90 

56 

34 

16,913 


0) 

0) 

3,375 

16,913 

16,913 


165,000 

165,000 

20 


* Colored only. 


c Included in report of Bethesda Incurable Hospital. 


7 Includes branch at 3533 Laclede Avenue. 









































































































































































































118 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table I.— INSTITUTIONS FOR THE 


Class of children received. 

Year founded. 

Colored children received. 

Number of cottages. 

Paid employees at close of year. 

CHILDREN RECEIVED FOR 
TIME IN 1910. 

FIRST 

'3 

o 

Eh 

6 

03 

a 

'ci 

a 

<p 

fa 

Through— 

£ 

O 

© 

o 

p 

3 

0 

fa 

5 . 

c 

V. o 
©73 

43.5 

c3 

o g 
6-2 
o 

M 

a 

Ijj 

aS 

2§ 

Xl 

o 

lx # 

0x3 

c/3 "fa 
Q3 *0 

r o 

> V-. 

— < O 
C/3 
03'O 
— 4 0 

0) o 

8 

1 

two 

o3 

M 

£ 

•+-> 

o 

Dependent and neglected 

1836 

No. 


8 

513 

247 

266 

203 


29 

202 

79 

children. 













Babies under 3 and children 

1899 

No. 

.... 

22 

253 

0) 

0) 

4 

7 

10 

200 

32 

with their mothers. 














1827 

No. 



4 


4 


4 


















1843 

No. 


12 

29 

15 

14 

3 



21 

5 

(Iren. 










Homeless and dependent 

1891 

No. 

.... 

18 

114 

51 

63 

80 

23 

.... 

11 

.... 

children. 













Orphan, destitute, and 
homeless boys. 

1835 

No. 

.... 

5 

96 

96 

.... 

43 



53 

.... 


1888 

Yes. 


5 

22 

11 

11 

14 



7 

1 

dren. 













Orphan children . 

1834 

No. 

5 

12 

41 

26 

15 




41 



1843 

No. 


5 

61 


61 

24 



37 


less girls. 













Orphan girls . 

1834 

No. 

.... 

8 

(») 

.... 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

<*) 

(0 

Orphan and indigent chil- 

1894 

No. 


( 4 ) 


0) 

( 4 ) 

(«) 

(«) 

( 4 ) 

(<) 

( 4 ) 

dren. 













Orphan children, from 3 to 12 . 

1864 

No. 

.... 

10 

15 

10 

5 




15 

.... 


1899 

Yes. 


6 

27 

15 

12 




27 



1881 

No. 


1 

88 

45 

43 

27 



58 

3 

doned children. 













Neglected and dependent 

1894 

Yes. 

6 

26 

92 

54 

38 

52 

40 




children under 16. 













Orphan and dependent chil- 

1874 

No. 


3 

125 

73 

52 


4 


121 


dren. 













Homeless and dependent 

1892 

No. 


5 

46 

( 1 ) 

0) 

.... 

46 




children. 













Orphan children 

18S9 

No. 


9 

16 

10 

6 




16 


Dependent, neglected, and 

1907 

Yes. 


4 

137 

98 

39 

137 





delinquent children. 













Catholic orphan and depend- 

1904 

Yes. 

.... 

12 

20 

16 

4 

2 



18 

. . . . 

ent children. 













Mentally sound, dependent 

1881 

Yes. 

.... 

11 

54 

33 

21 

24 

.... 

1 

29 

.... 

children under 16. 














1901 

No 

1 

2 

2 

1 

1 




2 


Dependent and neglected 
children. 

1896 

Yes. 


20 

217 

120 

97 

19 

2 

1 

186 

9 

Orphan children 

1890 

No. 


10 

25 

10 

15 





25 

Orphan and homeless nhil- 

1870 

Yes. 


10 

13 

9 

4 

13 





dren. 













Orphan, indigent, and neg- 

1866 

No. 


7 

10 

9 

1 




10 


lected children. 













Orphan and homeless girls 

1880 

No. 


5 

3 


3 




3 


Destitute children and 

1892 

Yes. 


7 

14 

6 

8 

10 



4 


boarders. 













Orphan and destitute chil- 

1888 

Yes. 



25 

0) 

0) 

25 





dren. 











Oiphan and dependent chil- 

1871 

Yes. 


26 

60 

37 

23 

35 



21 

4 

dren. 













Orphan children . 

1902 

(’) 


6 

32 

16 

16 

3 



29 


Orphan children . 

1892 

No. 



100 

50 

50 




100 


Indigent and neglected Prot- 

1884 

No. 


7 

24 

0) 

(>) 

10 



14 


estant orphanchildren. 













a 

0 

0 

.2 

0 

+•> 

I 


21 

22 

23 

24 

25 

26 

27 

28 

29 

30 

31 

32 

1 

2 

3 

1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


MISSOURI—Continued. 

St. Louis—C ontinued. 

Mission Free School. 

369 North Taylor Ave. 

Mothers’ and Babies’ Home. 

30^7 North Taylor Ave. 

Mullanphy Orphan Asylum. 

Taylor and Maryland Aves. 

Orphans’ Home... 

1711 Lafayette Ave. 

Receiving Home. 

4427 Margaretta Ave. 

St. Joseph’s Male Orphan Asylum. 

4701 South Grand Ave. 

St. Louis Colored Orphans’ Home. 

4316 Natural Bridge Road. 

St. Louis Protestant Orphan Asylum. 
Church Ave. (Webster Groves). 

St. Mary’s Female Orphan Asylum... 
Emerson and Harney Aves. 

St. Philomena’s Technical School. 

Huron and Cabanne Aves. 

Springfield: 

Protestant Children’s Home. 

Hawthorne Ave. 

Warrenton: 

Central Wesleyan Orphan Asylum 


MONTANA. 

Butte: 

Paul Clark Home. 

207 South Excelsior Ave. 
Helena: 

St. Joseph’s Orphan Home... 
Montana Ave. 

Twin Bridges: 

State Orphans’ Home. 


NEBRASKA. 

Benson: 

St. James’ Orphanage. 

Orphanage Ave. 
Fremont: 

Lutheran Orphan Home.. 
1544 Military Ave. 
Holdrege: 

Christian Orphans’ Home. 
R. D. 3. 

Lincoln: 

Detention Home. 

746 Rose St. 

St. Thomas’ Orphanage... 


Supervised or conducted by— 


State Public School. 

944 H St. 

Omaha: 

Bethlehem Children’s Home. 

Thirty-fourth St. and Fowler Ave. 

Child Saving Institute. 

Forty-second and Jackson Sts. 

York: 

Mothers’ Jewels’ Home. 


NEVADA. 

Carson City: 

State Orphans’ Home.. 


NEW HAMPSHIRE. 


Concord: 

Orphans’ Home. 


Unitarian Church of the 
Messiah. 

Christian Woman’s National 
Benevolent Association. 
Sisters of the Sacred Heart.. 

Private corporation (Epis¬ 
copal). 

Children’s Home Society of 
Missouri. 

Sisters of St. Joseph. 


Private corporation.. 
Private organization. 

Sisters of Charity. 

Sisters of Charity. 


Private corporation. 

Methodist Episcopal Church. 

Private corporation. 

Sisters of Charity. 

State of Montana. 


Sisters of Mercy.. 

Missouri Synod. 

Private corporation.. 
County of Lancaster. 


Rolfe and Rumford Asylum. 

15 Hall St. 

Dover: 

Dover Children’s Home. 

Locust St. 

St. Mary’s Orphanage. 

38 Court St. 

Franklin: 

New Hampshire Orphans’ Home. 

Webster Place. 

Manchester: 

Asylum of Our Lady of Perpetual Help 
222 Hanover St. 

Hospice St. Vincent de Paul. 

253 Lake Ave. 

Manchester Children’s Home. 

135 Webster St. 


Sisters of Charity (Grey 
Nuns). 

State of Nebraska. 


Lutheran Augustana Synod. 
Private corporation. 


Woman’s Home Missionary 
Society, M. E. Church. 


State of Nevada. 


Protestant Episcopal 
Church. 

Private corporation. 


Private corporation. 
Sisters of Mercy. 


Private corporation. 
Sisters of Mercy. 


Sisters of Charity of Provi¬ 
dence. 

Private corporation. 


Not reported. 


2 Twenty-three mothers in institution at close of year. 


3 Included in report of Children’s Home Society of Missouri. 


































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


119 


CARE OF CHILDREN: 1910 —Continued. 


CHILI 

3 

o 

Eh 

Male. g 

Female. g a 

C/2 

THE INSTITUT 
E OF YEAR. 

Dependent. 

Working boys or girls. g 

Delinquent. h 

CHILDREN 
OUTSIDE BUT 
UNDER 
SUPERVISION. 

CHILDREN 
PLACED IN 
FAMILIES 
DURING 
YEAR. 

CHILDREN 
DISCHARGED 
DURING YEAR. 

Orphans and 
foundlings. 

Invalid or defec¬ 
tive. 

All other. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

43 

18 

25 



43 



14 

5 

9 

14 

8 

6 

502 

243 

259 

2 77 

0) 

(0 



77 



252 

0) 

0) 




190 

v) 

( l ) 

20 

20 

20 






4 


4 

3 

3 

96 

41 

55 

94 

2 










43 

27 

16 

32 

17 

15 

12 




20 

S50 

500 

350 

179 

93 

86 

16 

9 

7 

225 

225 


18 

2 

185 

.... 

20 

55 

55 


12 

12 


112 

112 


33 

24 

9 

33 





2 

1 

1 

2 

1 

1 

2 


2 

77 

51 

26 

77 











49 

37 

12 

206 


206 

20 

2 

184 



51 


51 

13 


13 

66 


66 

C 1 ) 

.... 

(>) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

o) 

< i ) 

(>) 

.... 

0) 

0) 

.... 

(>) 

0) 

.... 

( i ) 

50 


w 

w 


(<) 

(0 

o) 

(<) 


(<) 

(*) 

(o 

<<) 

(«) 

(<) 

0) 

98 

54 

44 

98 





5 

4 

1 




8 

6 

2 

48 

23 

25 

4S 














176 

76 

100 

126 

1 

49 









99 

49 

50 

0) 

(i) 

0) 

0) 


0) 









( l ) 

0) 

( l ) 

121 

70 

51 

121 





16 

10 

6 

16 

10 

6 

64 

35 

29 

5 

2 

3 



5 



0) 

(1) 

0) 

35 

16 

19 

1 


1 

56 

39 

17 

56 





2 

2 




22 

14 

8 

137 

49 

88 

56 




81 

(i) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

( 1 ) 

( l ) 

0) 

65 

45 

20 

52 


13 



2 

1 

1 

2 

1 

1 

5 

2 

3 

127 

73 

54 

23 

7 

97 

.... 


115 

70 

45 

88 

54 


33 

22 

n 

20 

6 

14 

17 


3 



1 

1 


1 

1 


3 

1 

2 

41 

23 

18 

24 


& 17 



344 

186 

158 

88 

40 

48 

144 

77 

67 

74 

37 

37 

74 











18 

11 

7 

91 

44 

47 

65 


26 









19 

11 

8 

42 

24 

18 

26 


6 16 






3 

2 

i 

i 

10 

5 

5 

• 

20 

20 

17 


3 









3 


3 

37 

23 

14 

26 


11 



3 

1 

2 

3 


3 

4 

3 

1 

26 

m 

m 

20 


6 









. 



161 

\ / 

110 

\ ) 

51 

118 

.... 

37 

.... 

6 

397 

o) 

(■) 

37 

21 

16 

25 

14 

11 

32 

16 

16 

30 


2 






1 

1 


12 

8 

4 

100 

50 

50 

100 






1 





0) 

( 1 ) 

0) 

45 

20 

25 

45 








1 

.... 

1 

23 

0) 

0) 


4 Records destroyedby fire. 6 Includes 15 boarders. 


RECEIPTS 

DURING YEAR. 


PAYMENTS DURING 
YEAR. 

VALUE OF 
PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Total. 

Derived from— 

Ap- 

pro- 

pria- 

tions. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources 

Total. 

For 

run¬ 

ning 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total 

(includ- 

. ^ , 
invested 

funds). 

Land, 

build- 

mgs, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

$6,543 


S440 


$6,103 

$6,953 

$6,595 

S358 

S176,000 

$50,000 

21 

5,643 


3,460 

SI, 540 

643 

8,893 

6,754 

2,139 

5,000 

5,000 

22 

(>) 

« 

( l ) 

0) 

0) 

c i ) 

(>) 

( i ) 

0) 

0) 

23 

16,473 


573 

1,059 

14,841 

15,197 

14,512 

685 

350,000 

50,000 

24 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

<*> 


( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( a ) 

c 3 ) 

25 

19,345 


11,614 

4,815 

2,916 

18,031 

15,689 

2,342 

203,175 

203,175 

26 

2,150 


588 

947 

615 

2,302 

1,986 

316 

6,200 

6,200 

27 

13,592 


761 

2,554 

10,277 

13,592 

13,592 


300,000 

200,000 

28 

19,286 


11,675 

4,620 

2,991 

17,881 

17,464 

417 

182,575 

182,575 

29 

(o 

0) 

0) 

(>) 

o) 

0) 

C 1 ) 

(*) 

(o 

0) 

30 

3,583 


2,343 

526 

714 

3,680 

3,546 

134 

14,075 

10,000 

31 

9,000 


6,800 

2,200 


10,000 

7,500 

2,500 

85,000 

55,000 

32 

9,480 


9,480 


9,602 

9,602 

100,000 

100,000 

1 

18,290 

SI, 200 

6,720 

6,429 

3,941 

17,817 

15,283 

2,534 

85,000 

85,000 

2 

34,297 

32,000 


497 

1,800 

38,297 

34,297 

4,000 

92,000 

92,000 

3 

10,648 


5,127 

2, 762 

2,759 

8,821 

7,860 

961 

60,000 

60,000 

1 

0) 

0) 

( i ) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

c) 

0) 

0) 

2 

11,839 


8,735 

1,283 

1,821 

11,500 

9,500 

2,000 

50,000 

50,000 

3 

5,000 

5,000 




4,951 

4,951 


8,000 

8,000 

4 

8, 000 

5,000 

2,000 

1,000 

8,000 

7,000 

1,000 

50,000 

50,000 

5 

22, 912 

21,780 


80 

1,052 

16,086 

12,086 

4,000 

2,000 

2,000 

6 

2, 691 


2,028 

624 

39 

1,849 

1,849 


5,284 

4,500 

7 

14, 550 


12,004 

2,486 


14, 673 

14,673 


0) 

C 1 ) 

8 

8,000 


0) 

(*) 

(*) 

8,000 

(>) 

(■) 

100,000 

100,000 

9 

19, 000 

19,000 



- 

23,917 

21,417 

2,500 

60,000 

60,000 

1 

8, 726 

420 

3,050 

1,182 

4,074 

8,53S 

4,772 

3,766 

94,848 

24,000 

1 

9, 475 




9,475 

5,884 

4, 792 

1,092 

208, 500 

10,000 

2 

6,618 

1,883 

3,094 

735 

906 

4,662 

4,343 

319 

29,029 

10,000 

3 

m 

1,200 

(i) 



1,200 

1, 200 


0) 

0) 

4 

V / 

20, 247 

2,504 

10,479 

7,264 

18, 214 

16,176 

2,038 

437,967 

264,341 

5 

3 979 

300 


3,679 


3,155 

3,155 


0) 

0) 

6 

(>) 

0) 

(») 

0) 

0) 

10,000 

10,000 


( i ) 

35,000 

i 7 

9,198 

. 

52 

2,018 

7,128 

5,626 

5,626 

. 

120,000 

40,000 

1 8 


« Includes 5 placed in the Home to be educated. 7 Indeterminate. 

































































































































































































































































120 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table I.— INSTITUTIONS FOR THE 


£ 

a 

0 

o 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


NEW HAMPSHIRE—Continued. 


Supervised or conducted by— 


Class of children received. 


'V 

© 

a 

a 

o 


C3 

© 


T3 

© 


d 

© 

■9 


■d 

© 


o 

O 


9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 


8 

9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 
21 

22 

23 

24 


Manchester— Continued. 

Mercy Home. 

86 Mammoth Road. 

Notre Dame Orphanage. 

Notre Dame Ave. 

St. Joseph's Boys’ Home. 

Hanover St. 

St. Patrick’s Orphanage. 

184 Hanover St. 

St. Peter’s Orphanage. 

55 Kelley St. 

Nashua: 

King’s Daughters’ Day Nursery and 
Children’s Home. 

76 Kinsley St. 

Protestant Orphanage. 

16 Burritt St. 

St. Joseph’s Orphanage. 

293 Main St. 

Portsmouth: 

Chase Home for Children. 

358 Court St. 


Woman’s Christian Tem¬ 
perance Union. 

Sisters of Charity.. 

Sisters of Mercy... 

Sisters of Mercy. 

Sisters of Charity. 


King’s Daughters’ Benevo¬ 
lent Association. 

Private corporation. 

Grey Nuns.. 


Private corporation 


Unprotected friendless girls 1890 
under 14. 

Orphan girls. 1885 


Orphan, destitute, and 

abandoned boys. 

Orphan, destitute, and 

abandoned girls. 

Orphan, destitute, and 

abandoned boys. 


1886 

1873 

1902 


Orphan and destitute chil¬ 
dren. 


1894 


Orphan and neglected chil- 1902 
dren from 21 to 12. 

Orphanand abandoned chil- 1891 
dren. 


Orphan and homeless chil¬ 
dren. 


1877 


NEW JERSEY. 

Arlington: 

St. Anthony’s Orphan Asylum. 

Passaic and Midland Aves. 

Atlantic City: 

Children’s Sea-Shore Home. 

Annapolis and Atlantic Aves. 

Camden: 

Camden Home for Friendless Children. 
Haddon Ave. 

West Jersey Orphanage. 

Sixth and Mechanic Sts. 

East Orange: 

Orphan Home. 

197 Harrison St. 

Elizabeth: 

Elizabeth Orphan Asylum. 

41 Cherry St. 

Englewood: 

Daisy Fields Home and Hospital for 
Crippled Children. 

Central Ave. 

Flemington Junction: 

George Junior Republic 7 . 

Flemington P. O. 

Gladstone: 

St. Bernard’s School. 

Hackensack: 

Bergen County Children’s Home 8 . 

125 Essex St. 

Hoboken: 

Receiving Home. 

502 Bloomfield St. 

Hopewell: 

St. Michael’s Orphan Asylum. 

Hopewell St. 

Jersey City: 

Children’s Home. 

134 Glenwood Ave. 

Christian Home for Orphan Children... 
178 Magnolia Ave. 

Home of the Homeless. 

266 Grove St. 

Orphans’ Home of the Children’s Friend 
93 Nelson Ave. 

St. Joseph’s Orphan Asylum. 

81 York St. 

St, Mary’s Orphan Asylum. 

561 Jersey Ave. 

St. Michael’s Qrphanage. 

Pavonia Ave. and Erie St. 

Kearney: 

Catholic Protectory. 

Arlingtoh P. O. 

Italian Protectory. 

Harrison P. O. 

Lodi: 

Immaculate Conception Orphanage.... 
South Main. 

Montclair: 

Children’s Home. 

21 Gates Ave. 

St. Vincent’s Nursery and Babies’ Hos¬ 
pital. 

45 Elm St. 


Missionary Sisters of the 
Sacred Heart. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation__ 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

George Junior Republic As¬ 
sociation of New Jersey. 

Private corporation. 

Bergen County Children’s 
Aid, and S. P. C. C. 

United Aid Society and 
S. P. C. C. 

Sisters of St. Francis. 

Private corpo ration. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Lutheran Ministerium of 
New York. 

Sisters of St. Joseph of Peace. 

Sisters of Charity. 

Sisters of Charity. 

Sisters of Charity. 

Pallotine Sisters of Charity.. 

Felician Sisters. 

Private corporation. 

Sisters of Charity. 


Orphan and destitute girls.. 


Debilitated or diseased indi¬ 
gent city children. 

Needy children.. 

Orphan and destitute chil¬ 
dren. 

Orphan and destitute chil¬ 
dren. 

OrphaD and destitute chil¬ 
dren. 

Invalid and destitute chil¬ 
dren. 


Delinquent, wayward, and 
truant boys. 

Worthy boys of school age... 

Orphan, destitute, and 
homeless children. 

( 2 ) . 


Homeless, dependent, and 
abandoned children. 

Destitute and friendless 
children. 

Orphan and destitute chil¬ 
dren. 

Orphan and destitute chil¬ 
dren. 

Orphan children. 

Orphan and abandoned chil¬ 
dren. 

Orphan and neglected girls.. 

Orphan children. 


W ay ward and destitute 
boys from 14 to 18. 

Orphan and homeless boys.. 


Orphan and destitute chil¬ 
dren. 

Orphan children. 

Foundlings and destitute in¬ 
fants. 


1900 

1872 

1865 

1874 

1854 

1858 

1893 

1910 

1900 

1900 

( 2 ) 

1898 

1864 

1900 
1883 
1904 
1887 
1862 
1880 

1872 

1901 

1909 

1882 

1899 


Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 


No. 

Yes. 


No. 

( 5 ) 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

Yes. 

( 2 ) 

No. 

Yes. 

No. 

No. 

Yes. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

No. 

No. 

No. 


Number of cottages. 

Paid employees at close of year. 

CHILDREN received for 
TIME IN 1910 

FIRST 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Through — 

Public officials. 

Officials of the 

institution. 

Child-placing 

societies. 

Relatives or 

friends of child. 

Other agencies. 


6 

7 


7 

7 






73 


73 

5 



68 



2 

• 

42 

42 


11 

6 

.... 

25 

.... 

.... 

3 

21 

.... 

21 

10 

6 

.... 

5 

.... 


7 

82 

82 


8 



43 

31 


2 

16 

8 

8 




16 



3 

19 

13 

6 




19 



19 

95 

54 

41 




95 



4 

2 

1 

1 

1 



1 



1 

32 


32 



14 

18 



9 

2S8S 

1287 

1601 




2186 

702 


7 

44 

26 

18 


15 


29 



4 

3 


3 




3 



21 

36 

18 

18 




36 



8 

19 

10 

9 

6 

6 

5 


2 


6 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 





( 2 ) 


11 

20 

20 





20 



2 

66 

30 

36 

45 

9 

2 

10 

.... 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

(*) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


8 

89 

46 

43 

5 

11 

.... 

61 

12 


6 

12 

9 

3 




12 



6 

27 

12 

15 




27 



5 

30 

18 

12 




30 



6 

6 

1 

5 




6 



11 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


3 

32 

. ... 

32 

8 

11 

.... 

11 

. 2 


5 

35 

25 

10 




35 



32 

59 

59 

10 


28 

21 



5 

29 

29 





29 



1 

10 

3 

7 

.... 

7 

.... 

3 



6 

4 

3 

1 




4 


.... 

5 

78 

37 

41 




78 

.... 


1 Included in report of Notre Dame Hospital. 
7 Not reported. 


3 Includes 22 boarders. 

4 Includes $31,466 from the permanent fund. 






































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


121 


CARE OF CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


CHILDREN IN THE 
CLOSE OF 

INSTITUTION 

YEAR. 

AT 

CHILDREN 
OUTSIDE BUT 
UNDER 
SUPERVISION. 

CHILDREN 
PLACED IN 
FAMILIES 
DURING 
YEAR. 

CHILDREN 
DISCHARGED 
DURING YEAR. 

RECEIPTS 

DURING YEAR. 


PAYMENTS DURING 
YEAR. 

VALUE OF 
PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Total. 

^5 

a 

Female. 

Dependent. 

Working boys or girls. 

Delinquent. 

Total. 

Derived from— 

Orphans and 
foundlings. 

Invalid or defec¬ 
tive. 

All other. 

3 

o 

e 

JD 

73 

3 

Female. 

73 

o 

H 

c3 

S 

Female. 

13 

■M 

O 

Eh 

6 

a 

Female. 

Ap- 

pro- 

pria- 

tions. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources 

Total. 

For 

run¬ 

ning 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total 

(includ¬ 

ing 

invested 

funds). 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

21 


21 



21 









7 



$7,390 




$7,390 

$7, 205 

$7,205 


$26,341 

$15,000 

9 

134 


134 

117 


17 



210 


210 

1 


1 

69 


69 

0) 

o) 

0) 

0) 

(i) 

0) 

0) 

o) 

(i) 

(i) 

10 

78 

78 


78 








7 

7 


15 

15 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

11 

73 


73 

73 








10 


10 

17 


17 

( 2 ) 



( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

12 

126 

120 


67 

.... 

57 

.... 

2 

6 

6 

.... 

1 

1 


86 

86 


0) 

o) 

(>) 

0) 

0) 

(>) 

0) 

0) 

o) 

to 

13 

15 

7 

8 

15 











18 

14 

4 

1,949 

$594 

$699 

$605 

51 

1,840 

1,840 


5,276 

4,000 

14 

25 

15 

10 

19' 


6 









19 

9 

10 

6,574 

153 

1,158 

5,263 

2,954 

2,954 


6,500 

5,000 

15 

175 

88 

87 

127 

4 

3 41 


3 







95 

54 

41 

11,429 

1 890 

1,569 

7,970 

12,776 

9,171 

$3,605 

90,000 

90,000 

16 

15 

8 

7 

13 


2 



1 

1 


1 

1 


6 

5 

1 

3,351 

474 

521 

390 

1,966 

2,772 

2,772 

86,013 

6,500 

17 

78 

78 

44 


34 









29 


29 

4,206 

2,426 

$ 

890 

890 

4,146 

3,417 

729 

17,150 

17,150 

1 

16 

9 

7 


16 










2872 

1278 

1594 

73,231 


*53, 685 

4,196 

15,350 

41,765 

40,909 

855 

550,000 

300,000 

2 

56 

34 

22 

53 

1 

2 



31 

17 

14 

17 

6 

11 

28 

20 

8 

5,774 

250 

1,998 

778 

2, 748 

5,470 

4,903 

567 

70,000 

30,000 

3 

6 20 


(2) 

(2) 


( 2 ) 



19 

13 

6 

19 

13 

6 




6,208 


5,026 

438 

744 

5, 702 

2,495 

3,207 

25,000 

10,000 

4 

66 

V / 

36 

30 

45 

1 

20 



1 

1 


3 

2 

1 

15 

9 

6 

17,946 


9, 460 

2,527 

5,959 

14, 666 

14,078 

588 

140. 604 

85,000 

5 

Aft 

32 

33 

65 





15 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

5 

3 

2 

10 

4 

6 

7,243 


4,080 

3,163 

6,427 

5,684 

743 

90,000 

75,000 

6 


(2) 

(2) 

18 








( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

6,865 

< 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

7,524 

7,524 


15,000 

15,000 

7 



V i 

















8 


















28,300 


25,000 

3,000 

300 

28,000 

15,000 

13,000 

60,000 

50,000 

9 

• 46 

23 

23 

38 

. • •. 

7 

.... 

1 

51 

21 

30 

51 

21 

30 

23 

13 

10 

9,328 

4,755 

2,294 

1,221 

1,058 

9,389 

8,221 

1,168 

11,000 

11,000 

10 

( j ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

c 2 ) 

( 2 > 

c 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( j ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

11 


i qi 

140 

1 R3 

& 

132 



115 

58 

57 

36 

19 

17 

79 

39 

40 

12,912 

2,867 

300 

1,330 

8,415 

12,560 

12,560 


215,000 

215,000 

12 

0^0 

lOl 

95 

10 

3^ 




10 

5 

5 

10 

5 

5 




7,525 

3,407 


4,118 

5,165 

3,832 

1,333 

144,307 

50,000 

13 

oo 

Afi 


31 

58 

1 

7 



9 

4 

5 

4 

2 

2 

9 

6 

3 

6,389 


3,541 

2, 780 

68 

4,775 

4,433 

342 

50,000 

50,000 

14 









4 

2 

2 




32 

18 

14 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

3,300 

3,200 

100 

29,500 

15,000 

15 

QO 

\ ) 

14 

\) 

16 

\ ) 

30 


t / 



( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

3 

1 

2 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

5,857 


4,591 

837 

429 

17,410 

2,410 

15,000 

30,000 

30,000 

16 

07A 

141 


244 



32 





( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

2,500 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

c 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

17 

CO 


AO 

49 

0 

18 


3 


3 

3 


3 

19 


19 

2,937 

1,034 


1,903 


2,906 

2,615 

291 

40,000 

40,000 

18 

QQ 


44 

79 


20 



155 

85 

70 







10,000 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

10,200 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

150,000 

19 

yy 

i sn 

oo 

180 


16 


164 





70 

70 


40,500 


20,000 

2,500 

18,000 

42,500 

38,000 

4,500 

225,000 

225,000 

20 

75 



30 

1 ^ 


45 









19 

19 


7,993 


3,557 

2,092 

2,344 

7,112 

5,862 

1,250 

70,000 

70,000 

21 

1 K 

o 

19 













3,746 


920 

268 

2,558 

3,746 

2,727 

1,019 

30,000 

30,000 

22 

10 

40 

20 

20 

40 





7 

3 

4 

3 


3 

2 

2 


6,965 


5,618 

1,284 

63 

5,986 

5,210 

776 

41,297 

35,000 

23 


IQ 

13 

32 











19 

9 

10 

8,850 


7,166 

1,684 

. 

10,849 

9,079 

1,770 

38,300 

38,300 

24 



























1 


6 Colored only. 
• Average. 


* Not in active operation in 1910. „ „ , 

b Includes report of Children’s Aid and Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children. 





































































































































































































122 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table I.— INSTITUTIONS FOR THE 









cS 

CHILDREN RECEIVED 

FOR 

FIRST 






'P 


© 

>> 

«*-« 

o 



TIME IN 1910. 







8 







Through— 

1 





© 

CO 

g> 

o 














a 









a 

P 

fl 

P 

o 

NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of children received. 

T3 

© 

'a 

0 

p 

a 

© 

H 

'P 

a 

43 

O 

o 

o 

(M 

o 

t-i 

© 

§ 

o 

P, 

a 



G) 

23 

.2 

o 

fS 

o 

<D 

S3 . 
~ a 
■— o 
0-^3 

23 S, 

W> 

P 

Jjj 

P<QJ 

Ot? 
co rp 
©43 

— o 

-*-* CO 

i 

o 

a 

<v 

to 

a 

P 

CO 




«*-> 

a 

© 

8 

O 

a 

p 

© 

C3 

O 

0) 

c3 

c3 

a 

© 

a 

rO 

P 

g.g 

2 o 

cS'O 
—* M 

1 

l-i 





o 

z 

Ph 

E-i 

s 


P2 

o 

o 

Ch 43 

o 


NEW JERSEY—Continued. 
















Mount Holly: 




No. 




0) 


0) 

( l ) 

0) 

o 

(■) 

25 

Burlington County Children’s Home... 
Pine St. 

Private corporation. 

Homeless and dependent 
children. 

1864 

.... 

5 

11 











New Brunswick: 

• 



Yes. 









6 


26 

Children’s Industrial Home 


Orphan and destitute chil¬ 
dren. 

1876 


6 

6 

3 

3 




.... 

190 Somerset St. 


Yes. 




17 

12 




29 


27 

Colored Industrial School 


Orphan children over fi __ 

1897 


4 

29 




.... 

110 Comstock St. 



Yes. 




71 

55 

19 



107 


28 



Orphan and homeless chil¬ 
dren under 7. 

1893 


3 

126 




Easton Ave. 













Newark: 




Yes. 





22 

12 



38 


29 

Eighth Avenue Baby Shelter and Day 
Nursery. 

Private corporation. 

Children under 8. 

1892 


11 

54 

32 

.... 

4 

.... 
















61 Eighth Ave. 




No. 





10 




21 


30 



Orphan children from 3 to 9.. 

1848 


13 

21 

11 





284 Belleville Ave. 


No. 



1 




6 


31 

Hebrew Benevolent and Orphan Asy¬ 
lum. 



1861 


12 

6 

5 

















534 Clinton Ave. 













33 


32 

Home for the Friendless. 

Private corporation. 

Orphan children. 

1872 

No. 


8 

45 

23 

22 



12 


South Orange Ave. and Bergen St. 



Yes. 




111 

928 





33 

House of Detention 


Delinquent nhildren 

1910 


7 

928 

817 





New St. 










34 

Newark Orphan Asylum. 

Private corporation .... 

Orphan children.. 

1849 

No. 


10 

27 

16 

11 




27 


323 High St. 



No. 









35 


Independent Order of Odd 
Fellows. 

Orphan children of Odd Fel¬ 
lows or Rebekahs. 

1895 


2 

7 

4 

3 




7 


20 Halleck St. 

No. 









10 


36 

St. Mary’s Orphan Asylum. 

Sisters of Charity. 

Orphan children. 

1858 


8 

50 

20 

30 


40 



South Orange Ave. 

St. Peter’s Orphan Asylum. 

School Sisters of Notre Dame. 

Orphan children. 

No. 


22 

37 

24 

13 

2 

12 


23 


37 

1868 

21 Livingston St. 













Parsippany: , 




Yes. 











38 




1881 


11 

15 

11 

4 

15 





Passaic: 









39 

Passaic Home and Orphan Asylum.... 
64 River Drive. 



18S2 

Yes. 


3 

12 

8 

4 




12 



dren. 









Paterson: 















40 

Children’s Home . . 

Passaic County S. P. C. C. 
and Children’s Aid. 

Homeless children... 

1905 

No. 


5 

53 

13 

40 


52 

1 



848 Market St. 







41 

Paterson Orphan Asylum... 


Orphan and destitute chil- 

1864 

No. 


12 

33 

16 

17 


33 




Market St. 


cfren. 







42 

St. Joseph’s Orphan Asylum. 

Sisters of Charity. 

Orphan children. 

1851 

No. 



C 1 ) 


f 1 ) 

( l ) 

(*) 

( l ) 

( l ) 

C 1 ) 

(Totowa.) 







Plainfield: 















43 

Children’s Home. 

Private corporation. 

Destitute children. 

1877 

No. 


6 

(') 

0) 

(■) 

0) 

( l ) 

(*) 

(*) 

(>) 

Jackson and Westervelt Aves. 







Somerville: 















44 

Memorial Children’s Home... 

Judson Memorial Church, 

Foundlings, and orphan and 
homeless children. 

1893 

No. 


5 

15 

11 

4 




15 


Box 112. 

New York. 









South Amboy: 















45 

Christ Church Home. 

Private organization. 

Orphan and destitute girls.. 

1857 

No. 

1 

2. 

1 


1 




1 


Main St. 









Summit: 















46 

Blind Babies’ Home. 

International Sunshine So- 

Blind children too young to 
enter other institutions. 

1909 

Yes. 


8 

9 

3 

6 

3 

3 


3 


Pine Grove Ave. 

cietv. 









47 

Fresh Air and Convalescent Home. 

Private corporation. 

Children convalescent or 

1887 

Yes. 


8 

(>) 

C 1 ) 

(>) 

0) 

0) 

(>) 

0) 

0) 

Trenton: 


needing preventive care. 














48 

McKinley Receiving Home. 

New Jersey Children’s Home 
Society. 

Normal destitute children... 

1901 

Yes. 


9 

93 

45 

48 

C 1 ) 

0) 

( l ) 

0) 

< x > 

Brunswick AveT (R. D. 2.) 



West Hoboken: 














49 

Holy Rosary Institution. 

Pallotine Sisters of Charity.. 

Orphan girls. 

1906 

No. 


4 

30 


30 




30 


317 Spring St. 









50 

St. Francis Orphan Asylum. 

Franciscan Sisters of the Im- 

Orphan and indigent girls... 

1904 

No. 

2 


4 


4 



4 



327 Central Ave. 

maculate Conception. 












NEW MEXICO. 
















Albuquerque: 















1 

Harwood Industrial School. 

Woman’s Home Missionary 
Society, M. E. Chinch. 

Mexican girls. 

1S96 

No. 


5 

29 


29 




29 


405 North Fourteenth St. 










Santa Fe: 














2 

St. Vincent’s Orphan Home. 

Sisters of Charity. 

Mexican orphan girls. 

1871 

No. 

(') 


45 


45 

3 



42 



NEW YORK. 










Albany: 















1 

Albany Orphan Asylum. 

Private corporation. 

Destitute and dependent 
children. 

1829 

Yes. 

5 

38 

85 

49 

36 

79 


1 

5 


New Scotland and South Lake Aves. 






2 

Frances Elliott Austin Infants’ Home.. 

Sisters of Charity. 

Orphan and destitute in¬ 
fants. 

1909 

Yes. 


5 

51 

23 

28 

38 



13 



95 Elm St. 







3 

Holy Cross House. 

Private corporation (Epis¬ 
copal). 

Abandoned and friendless 

1903 

( 6 ) 


2 

20 

8 

12 

1 



6 

13 


72 Orange St. 

children. 






4 

House of Detention. 

Mohawk and Hudson River 

Delinquent and neglected 
children. 

1902 

Yes. 


4 

603 

458 

145 

603 






80 How'ard St. 

Humane Society. 







5 

St. Francis de Sales Asylum. 

Sisters ol Charity. 

Oiphan and abandoned 
children under 6. 

1886 

Yes. 


9 

55 

34 

21 

49 



6 



Clinton and Catherine Sts. 








6 

St. Margaret’s House. 

Coming Foundation. 

Orphan, homeless, and other 
infants. 

1883 

Yes. 


38 

121 

74 

47 

39 



82 



Hawk and Elk Sts. 








1 Not reported. 

5 Included in report of Passaic County Society for the Prevention cf Cruelty to Children. 


3 Included in report of New Jersey Children’s Home Society. 

4 Includes 19 boarders. 















































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


123 


CARE OF CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


CHILDREN IN THE INSTITUTION 
CLOSE OF YEAR 

AT 

CHILDREN 
OUTSIDE BUT 
UNDER 
SUPERVISION. 

CHILDREN 
PLACED IN 
FAMILIES 
DURING 
YEAR. 

CHILDREN 
DISCHARGED 
DURING YEAR. 

Total. 

-—- 

Male. 

Female. 

Dependent. 

Working boys or girls. 

Delinquent. 

Orphans and 
foundlings. 

Invalid or defec¬ 
tive. 

All other. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

33 

14 

19 



33 












36 

12 

24 



36 



5 

3 

2 

1 

1 


1 

1 


52 

31 

21 

17 


34 


1 







29 

14 

15 

114 

56 

58 

102 


12 









12 

7 

5 

54 

32 

22 

41 

2 

11 



55 

30 

25 

3 

1 

2 

15 

9 

6 

115 

56 

59 

102 


13 



15 

7 

8 

8 

2 

6 

13 

4 

9 

56 

28 

28 

54 


2 



60 

30 

30 




14 

6 

8 

63 

33 

30 

36 


27 



26 

13 

13 

6 

2 

4 

19 

8 

11 

27 

( l ) 

0) 





27 







0 

0 

0 

87 

50 

37 

87 





100 

55 

45 

29 

17 

12 

17 

9 

8 

17 





1 

1 








240 

150 

90 

240 











C 1 ) 

0) 

0) 

203 

111 

92 

203 











8 

4 

4 

78 

( i ) 

0 

0 

0 

24 

0 

0 

0 

0 ) 

0) 

12 

0 

0 

16 

0 

0 

31 

14 

17 

16 


15 









13 

11 

2 

29 

14 

15 



29 



195 

96 

99 

195 

96 

99 

160 

75 

85 

96 

46 

50 

82 


14 



1 


1 

5 

4 

1 

19 

10 

9 

105 


105 

105 











6 


6 

(i) 

0) 

0) 



(i) 









( l ) 

0) 

( l ) 

32 

19 

13 

21 


11 









14 

0) 

0) 

14 


14 

13 




1 

0 ) 


0 

0 


0 

2 


2 

17 

6 

11 

16 


1 





(!) 

0) 

0 ) 

( i > 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 ) 

0 

0 

0 

0 ) 

0 

0 

0 

0 ) 

0 

50 

32 

18 

5 


45 



700 

467 

233 

86 

49 

37 




85 

85 

60 


4 25 










85 


85 

60 


25 









0) 


0) 

38 


38 

10 


28 









C 1 ) 


0) 

110 


no 

110 










0) 


0) 

1(30 

103 

57 

160 



• 


25 

10 

15 

13 

9 

4 

153 

97 

56 

26 

15 

11 

10 

1 

15 






2 

1 

1 

34 

13 

21 

19 

« 

11 

19 










2 

1 

1 

13 

7 

6 

(l) 

0 

(i) 


0 




46 

0 

0 

0 ) 

0) 

0 

48 

34 

14 

22 

26 






47 

27 

20 

46 

30 

16 

6 

.... 

40 






13 

4 

9 

111 

72 

39 


& Included in report of Maternity Hospital. ® Colored only. 


R 

Total. 

ECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 

Derived from— 


PAYMENTS DURING 
YEAR. 

VALUE OF 
PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Ap- 

pro- 

pria- 

tions. 

Donar 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources 

Total. 

For 

run¬ 

ning 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total 

(includ¬ 

ing 

invested 

funds). 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

$6,750 


$1,220 

$1,454 

$4,076 

$6,881 

$6,881 


0) 

0) 

25 

8,790 

$1,400 

5,016 

297 

2,077 

23,627 

4,627 

$19,000 

$61,500 

$50,000 

26 

2,321 


30 

2,246 

• 45 

3,361 

2,561 

800 

5,000 

5,000 

27 

6,803 

1,422 

1,406 

848 

3,127 

6,763 

5,438 

1,325 

40,000 

40,000 

28 

10,083 

2,000 

1,146 

1,887 

5,050 

10,083 

8,015 

2,068 

33,000 

25,000 

29 

14,832 


683 

1,503 

12,646 

15,192 

15,192 


C 1 ) 

0) 

30 

25,983 


21,091 


4,892 

23,224 

23,224 


70,000 

51,000 

31 

8,393 


1,520 


6,873 

6,691 

6,691 


(!) 

0) 

32 

0) 

0 




0) 

0) 

0 

0) 

( l ) 

33 

3,574 

3,434 

140 


11,498 

11,498 

103,519 

100,000 

34 

2,592 


1,633 

706 

253 

2,34S 

2,348 


26,000 

26,000 

35 

12,862 


5,535 

7,181 

146 

13,702 

13,702 


0) 

0) 

36 

4,422 


1,271 

3,151 


4,311 

3,736 

575 

40,000 

40,000 

37 

11,400 

5,716 

3,225 


2,459 

12,000 

10,938 

1,062 

72,387 

20,000 

38 

4,106 


2,548 

1,054 

504 

3,639 

3,086 

553 

23,400 

15,000 

39 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 



( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

40 

11,583 


648 


10,935 

10,851 

9,599 

1,252 

286,011 

160,000 

41 

0 

0 

0) 

0 

0 

0) 

0) 

0 

0 

0 

42 

3,588 


1,552 

778 

1,258 

3,541 

3,177 

364 

54,000 

20,000 

43 

7,047 


4,346 

2,439 

262 

7,530 

7,530 


7,600 


44 

2,388 


0 

0 

0 

0 

0) 

0 

0) 

0 

45 

8,702 


8,702 



7,28 4 

5,566 

1,718 

25,000 

25,000 

46 

8,622 


2, 707 

2,881 

3,034 

10,775 

9,631 

1,144 

61,042 

30,000 

47 

( 3 ) 


( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

48 

7,200 


3,055 

2,945 

1,200 

6,119 

4,919 

1,200 

60,000 

60,000 

49 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

50 

2,600 


200 

1,000 

1,400 

2,600 

2,000 

600 

20,000 

20,000 

1 

0 

0) 

0 

0 

0) 

0 

0 

0) 

0 

0 

2 

104,93S 

20,439 

75,507 


8,992 

33,771 

31,758 

2,013 

402,025 

200,000 

1 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 


0 

0 

2 

3,970 

0 

0) 

0 

0 

3,787 

0 

0 

26,000 

26,00Q 

3 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 


0 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 


( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

4 

6,279 

6,137 

142 


4,366 

4,366 


60,000 

60,000 

5 

15,043 

4,204 

4,829 

2,470 

3,540 

f3,738 

13,738 


79,000 

45,000 

6 


7 Included in report of Mohawk and Hudson River Humane Society. 














































































































































































124 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table I.— INSTITUTIONS FOR THE 









$ 

CHILDREN RECEIVED 

FOR 

FIRST 






P3 


o 



TIME IN 1910. 








03 

> 

*03 


03 

m 

O 





Through— 


u 

03 





03 

W 

fO 

o 
























S 

3 

3 

a 

.2 

NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of children received. 

'd 

a> 

3 

3 

3 

03 

f-i 

2 

2 

o> 

c3 

-*-> 

O 

o 

«—l 

o 

t- 

03 

m 

o; 

03 

P4 

a 



jg 

.2 

*03 

6 

o 

JS 

• 

P 

Q 

°*43 

%B 

bjO 

P 

C3 .03 

P.03 

*-• . 
°s 

o 

i 

03 

a 

03 

fcJD 

03 

3 

+3 

eg 




u 

c3 

03 

03 

1-4 

,2 

a 

0) 

2 

*3 

2 

-*-> 

o 

03 

2 

3 

a 

03 

a 

-O 

p 

.2 

*03 2 

2 ° 
" in 

& 

03 ^ 

—< P 

03 .g 

u 

03 

£ 

3 

w 





O 

& 

Ph 

H 

a 



o 

o 

«<i= 

o 


NEW YORK—Continued. 
















Albany— Continued. 















7 

St. Vincent’s Female Orphan Asylum.. 
106 Elm St. 


Orphan and destitute girls 
under 16. 

1817 

No. 


0) 

74 


74 

71 



3 












8 

St. Vincent’s Male Orphan Asylum_ 

391 Western Ave. 

Brothers of the Christian 
Schools. 

Orphan, destitute, and way¬ 
ward fcoys. 

1854 

Yes. 


22 

87 

87 


82 



5 









Amsterdam: 














9 

Children’s Home. 

Private corporation. 

Orphan and needy children.. 

1883 

Yes. 


6 

39 

27 

12 

5 



34 


81 Spring St. 









Auburn: 















10 

Cayuga Asylum for Destitute Children. 
66 Owasco St. 

Private corporation . 

Homeless and destitute chil- 

1852 

Yes. 


(>) 

31 

23 

8 

17 



14 



dren from 2 to 12. 







Bath: 















11 

Davenport Home for Female Orphan 
Children. 

Binghamton: 

Private corporation. 

Orphan girls from 5 to 9.. .. 

1863 

Yes. 


11 

9 


9 




9 

















12 

St. Mary’s Orphan Home. 

Sisters of St. Joseph. 

Orphan and destitute chil- 

1878 

Yes. 


4 

41 

25 

16 

37 



4 


Chestnut fet. 


dren. 








13 

Susquehanna Valley Home 

Private corporation 

Orphan and indigent chil¬ 
dren. 

1869 

Yes. 


20 

81 

44 

37 

81 





Home Ave. 









Blauvelt: 















14 

Asylum of the Sisters of St. Dominic... 

Sisters of St. Dominic .. 

Destitute and neglected chil¬ 
dren. 

1878 

Yes. 

7 

17 

189 

101 

88 

182 



7 









Brook Haven, L. I.: 















15 

Suffolk County Children’s Home. .. 

County of Suffolk . 

Destitute children. 

1879 

Yes. 



48 

26 

22 


48 




Yaphank P.O. 










Brooklyn . 2 

Buffalo: 















16 

Buffalo Orphan Asylum . 

Private corporation . 

Orphan and destitute chil- 

1837 

Yes. 


23 

149 

79 

70 

87 



62 


403 Virginia St.” 


dren. 







17 

Children’s Aid Society’s Boys’ Home... 
261 Delaware ave. 

Buffalo Children's Aid So- 

Working boys from 10 to 18.. 

1870 

Yes. 


11 

156 

156 


28 



52 

76 

ciety. 





18 

GermanRoman Catholic Orphan Asylum 

Sisters of Third Order of St. 

Orphan and destitute chil- 

1874 

Yes. 


13 

176 

100 

76 

119 

6 

.. . . 

51 

.... 


564 Dodge St. 

Francis. 

dren. 













19 

Immaculate Heart of Mary Asylum.... 

Felician Sisters of St. Francis 

Orphan and destitute chil- 

1895 

No. 


5 

113 

64 

49 


61 


52 



William and Kennedy Sts. (East 


dren. 














Buffalo, P.O.) 















20 

Lutheran St. John’s Orphan Home 

Lutheran churches of Buffalo 

Orphan and homeless chil- 

1864 

No. 


8 

13 

7 

6 

1 



12 


Mineral Springs Road (West Sen- 

and vicinity. 

dren from 2 to 12. 







eca). 















21 

St. Agnes Training School for Girls . 

Sisters of Our Lady of Chari¬ 
ty of Refuge. 

Delinquent girls . 

1907 

Yes. 


2 

35 


35 

15 



20 


3233 Main St. “ 








22 

St. Mary’s Infant Asylum . 

Sisters of Charity . 

Orphan children under 5. ... 

1852 

Yes. 


20 

495 

241 

254 

88 



407 


126 Edward St. 







23 

St. Vincent’s Female Orphan Asylum. . 
1138 Ellicott St. 

Sisters of Charity . 

Homeless girls . 

1848 

No. 


6 

64 


64 

29 



35 









24 

Working Boys’ Home of the Sacred 
Heart. 

Sisters of St. Joseph . 

Homeless working boys . 

1890 

Yes. 



60 

60 






60 











35 Niagara Square. 
















Canandaigua: 















25 

Ontario Orphan Asylum . 

Private corporation . 

Orphan and destitute chil- 

1863 

Yes. 


10 

28 

17 

11 

9 



19 


Main St. 


dren. 







Charlton: 















26 

Charlton Industrial Farm School . 

Private corporation . 

Homeless and wayward boys 

1896 

No. 


8 

8 

8 


2 


3 

3 


Clarkstown: 









27 

St. Agatha Home for Children. 

Sisters of Charity (St. Vin¬ 
cent de Paul). 

Orphan and destitute chil- 

1885 

No. 


41 

167 

69 

98 

156 



11 


Nanuet P.O. 

dren. 







Cooperstown: 















28 

Orphan House of the Holy Saviour. 

Protestant Episcopal Church 

Orphan and destitute chil- 

1870 

Yes. 


13 

33 

19 

14 

31 

1 

. . . . 

1 

.... 


3 Beaver St. 

dren. 














Cortland: 















29 

King’s Daughters’ Home for Children.. 
240 Port Watson St. 

King’s Daughters. 

Orphan and homeless chil¬ 
dren. 

1906 

Yes. 


5 

49 

22 

27 

20 



29 










Dobbs Ferry: 















30 

St. Christopher’s Home. 

Methodist Episcopal Church. 

Dependent and destitute 

1881 

No. 

5 

21 

22 

7 

15 




22 


Dunkirk: 

children. 















31 

St. Mary’s Home and School. 

Sisters of St. Joseph. 

Orphan and destitute chil- 

1858 

Yes. 


9 

59 

26 

33 

27 



32 


319 Washington Ave. 


dren. 







Elmira: 















32 

Southern Tier Orphans’ Home. 

Private corporation. 

Dependent children from 2 
to 16. 

1868 

No. 


9 

41 

23 

18 

22 



19 


300 Franklin St. 







Freeville: 















33 

George Junior Republic. 

Private corporation. 

Destitute, neglected, and de¬ 
linquent children. 

1895 

Yes. 

12 

47 

101 

80 

21 

24 



59 

18 

Garden City, L. I.: 
















34 

House of St. Giles the Cripple. 

Protestant Episcopal Church 

Cripple children . 

1890 

Yes. 


23 

22 

6 

16 

11 



11 


Gerry: 







35 

Gerry Homes (Orphanage Dept.) . 

Free Methodist Church . 

Orphan and homeless desti¬ 
tute children. 

1886 

Yes. 


10 

53 

30 

23 

16 



37 


Haktsdale: 
















36 

St. Mary of the Angels .. 

Sisters of Misericorde . 

Destitute children . 

1887 

Yes. 

4 

10 

6 528 

5 268 

5 260 

6209 



6115 

6204 

Hastings upon Hudson: 






37 

New York Orphanage . 

Orphan Asylum Society in 
the City of New York. 

Destitute orphan children. .. 

1806 

No. 

9 

32 

43 

24 

19 


43 




Hawthorne: 















38 

Hawthorne School . 

Jewish Protectory and Aid 
Society. 

Delinquent Jewish boys . 

1902 

No. 


60 

188 

188 


0) 

0) 


0) 









J Not reported. 2 See New York City. 8 Includes report of St. Mary’s Maternity Hospital. 









































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


126 


CARE OF CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


CHILDREN IN THE 
CLOSE OF 

INSTITUTION 

YEAR. 

AT 

CHILDREN 
OUTSIDE BUT 
UNDER 
SUPERVISION. 

CHILDREN 
PLACED IN 
FAMILIES 
DURING 
YEAR. 

CHILDREN 
DISCHARGED 
DURING YEAR. 

RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 

PAYMENTS DURING 
YEAR. 

VALUE OF 
PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Total. 

© 

oJ 

a 

d 

B 

© 

Dependent. 

Working boys or girls. 

Delinquent. 

Total. 

Derived from— 

Orphans and 
foundlings. 

Invalid or defec¬ 
tive. 

All other. 

13 

+j 

o 

Eh 

6 

13 

a 

c3 

a 

© 

c3 

O 

Eh 

j© 

a 

JD 

13 

a 

© 

Ph 

*5 

o 

Eh 

13 

a 

JD 

c3 

a 

© 

Ph 

Ap- 

pro- 

pria- 

tions. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources 

Total. 

For 

run¬ 

ning 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total 

(includ¬ 

ing 

invested 

funds). 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

175 


175 

118 


57 









58 


58 

$19,966 

$17,516 

$826 

$227 

$1,397 

$19,966 

$18,510 

$1,456 

$75,000 

$75,000 

7 

92 

92 


42 


30 


20 




1 

1 


110 

110 


30,075 

27,006 

1,345 

243 

1,481 

29,418 

24,482 

4,936 

121,500 

121,500 

8 

29 

20 

9 

29 








1 

1 


11 

8 

3 

23, 715 

254 

21,248 

1,145 

1,068 

23,137 

4,827 

18,310 

37,576 

30,000 

9 

52 

26 

26 



52 









36 

22 

14 

12,565 

5,000 

980 

846 

5,739 

11,959 

11,959 

113,687 

40,000 

10 

70 


70 

70 








1 


1 

8 


s 

22,83S 



22,838 

24,339 

18,654 

5,685 

683,535 

192,850 

11 

163 

88 

75 

163 





44 

25 

19 

2 


2 

44 

28 

16 

18,930 

17,528 

1,242 

150 

10 

18,923 

16,422 

2,501 

80,000 

80,000 

12 

155 

99 

56 

os 


87 






25 

11 

14 

68 

44 

24 

20,973 

19,972 

197 


804 

20,433 

20,433 


53,700 

53,700 

13 

643 

285 

358 

336 


307 









219 

121 

98 

92,845 

85,985 

3,647 

270 

2,943 

95,337 

93,007 

2,330 

217,000 

217,000 

14 

58 

36 

22 

22 


36 



10 

5 

5 

10 

5 

5 

33 

16 

17 

4,937 

4,500 

382 

55 

4,778 

4,778 

15,000 

15,000 

15 

124 

55 

69 

56 


68 



1 

1 


2 


2 

152 

80 

72 

21,665 

6,205 

90 

2,595 

12,775 

17,982 

17,982 


341,346 

95,000 

16 

70 

70 




15 

55 


18 

18 





105 

105 


8,436 

157 

1,582 

5,199 

1,498 

8,334 

8,334 


90,490 

72.000 

17 

350 

205 

145 

288 


62 





30 

13 

17 

189 

94 

95 

41,581 

17,751 

7,092 

10,768 

5,970 

33,997 

30,474 

3,523 

274,134 

274,134 

18 

264 

154 

110 

264 














22,462 

5,228 

3,835 

2,869 

10,530 

22,462 

15,572 

6,890 

200,000 

200,000 

19 

78 

45 

33 

74 


4 









13 

6 

7 

14,511 

7,524 

2,809 

4,178 

14,511 

14,511 


170,377 

167,500 

20 

64 


64 

32 


3 


29 

3 


3 




26 


26 

9,946 

1,500 

3,641 

2,438 

2,367 

7,642 

6,596 

1,046 

20,804 

18,500 

21 

102 

46 

56 

102 








17 

10 

7 

376 

185 

191 

3 25,005 

3,010 

4,718 

11,661 

5,616 

3 24,045 

22,414 

1,631 

3 150,000 

150,000 

22 

191 


191 

191 











35 


35 

20,678 

9,641 

6,976 

2,826 

1,235 

20,117 

20,117 


17,500 

17,500 

23 

47 

47 





47 








35 

35 


5,523 


26 

1,623 

3,874 

6,553 

5,851 

702 

100,000 

100,000 

24 

60 

37 

23 

60 





1 

1 


3 


3 

10 

8 

2 

S, 995 

577 

252 

1,229 

6,937 

8,995 

8,326 

669 

130,482 

20,987 

25 

31 

31 


2 


17 


12 







1 

1 


10,018 

974 

7,000 

151 

1,893 

9,969 

7,156 

2,813 

112,189 

40,000 

26 

525 

239 

286 

359 


166 









179 

75 

104 

77,120 

68,113 

7,501 

768 

738 

77,236 

77,236 


103,300 

103,300 

27 

71 

34 

37 

71 



- 


g 


1 

12 

8 

4 




13,031 

6,517 

1,448 

1,185 

3,881 

13,031 

13,031 


70,285 

37,500 

28 

39 

25 

14 

11 


28 



20 

5 

15 

13 

2 

11 

20 

10 

10 

7,699 

1,521 

1,695 

670 

3,813 

7,656 

3,392 

4,264 

14,700 

14,700 

29 

126 

50 

76 

98 


28 









12 

4 

8 

26,458 


16,001 

1,113 

9,344 

26,372 

26,141 

231 

288,000 

150,000 

30 

82 

40 

42 

47 


35 






1 

1 


39 

21 

16 

12,748 

5,934 

136 

1,330 

5,348 

13,491 

13,091 

400 

47,500 

47,500 

31 

91 

99 

q 

5 

1 

25 



4 

1 

3 

6 

2 

4 

32 

18 

14 

6,845 

2,815 

75 

700 

3,255 

7,835 

7,835 


60,345 

40,145 

32 

156 

102 

54 

98 


5 

1 

52 

86 

62 

24 




86 

62 

24 

26,887 

4,283 

1,223 

10,735 

10,646 

68,669 

59,170 

9,499 

148,215 

148,215 

33 

4 c 

28 

20 

48 










33 

IS 

15 

15,228 

7,180 


145 

7, 903 

13,548 

13,286 

262 

65,010 

37,000 

34 

65 

32 

33 

22 

43 



4 

3 

1 

5 

4 

1 

37 

IS 

19 

5,990 

2,412 

1,307 

1,951 

320 

5,936 

5,536 

400 

w 

(*) 

35 

5 203 

5 105 

6 98 

5 149 

6 1 

& 53 









363 

202 

161 

( 6 ) 

( 8 ) 

(v 

(•) 

( 6 ) 


>) 

( 6 ) 

(«) 

(«) 

36 

99^ 

ion 

105 

225 





5 

2 

3 

16 

7 

9 

13 

7 

6 

81,100 


100 


81,000 

61,146 

60,888 

258 

618,767 

618,767 

37 

301 

301 




301 

(■) 

0) 





0) 

0) 


88,289 

40,941 

46,503 


845 

7 101,837 

7 89,607 

12,230 

572,560 

566,310 

38 


























4 Included in report of Home Department. 6 Included in report of Misericordia Hospital, New York. 

5 Also reported under Misericordia Hospital, New York. 7 Includes $20,000 payment of mortgage. 
































































































































































126 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table I_ INSTITUTIONS FOR THE 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


39 

40 

41 

42 

43 


NEW YORK—Continued. 

Hicksville, L. I.: 

St. John’s Protectory. 


Hudson: 

Hudson Orphan Asylum. 

400 State St. 

Ithaca: 

Ithaca Children’s Heme. 

518 West Seneca St. 

Jamestown: 

Gustavus Adolphus Orphans’ Home. 

Kings Park, L. I.: 

St. Johnland Home. 


44 


45 

40 

4? 


48 

49 

50 

51 


52 

53 

54 


55 


56 

57 

58 

59 

60 

61 

62 

63 

64 

65 

66 

67 


Kingston: 

IndustrialHomeof theCity of Kingston. 
East Chester St. 

Lackawanna: 

Our Lady of Victory Infant Home. 

St. John’s Protectory. 

Ridge Road. 

St. Joseph’s Male Orphan Asylum. 

Ridge Read. 

Lockport: 

Home for the Friendless. 

Lake Ave. 

Middletown: 

Children’s Home. 

Ridge St. 

Mineola, L. I.: 

Children’s Home. 

Willis Ave. 

Mount Vernon: 

Wartburg Orphans’ Farm School. 

East Lincoln Ave. 

New York City: 

Bronx and Manhattan Boroughs: 

Asylum of St. Vincent de Paul. 

215 West Thirty-ninth St. 

Colored Orphan Asylum. 

W est Two hundred and fifty-ninth 
St. (Riverdale-on-IIudson). 
Darrach Home for Crippled Children... 

118 West One hundred and fourth St. 
Dominican Convent of Our Lady of the 
Rosary. 

329 East Sixty-third St. 

Five Points House of Industry. 

442 West Twenty-third St. 
Forty-fourth Street Boys’ Lodging 
House. 

247 East Forty-fourth St. 

Hebrew Infant Asylum. 

One hundred and sixty-first St. and 
Eagle Ave. 

Hebrew Orphan Asylum. 

Amsterdam Ave. and One hundred 
and thirty-seventh St. 

Hebrew Sheltering Guardian Society of 
N. Y. Orphan Asylum. 

One hundred and fiftieth St. and 
Broadway. 

Home for Crippled Children... 

3740 Broadway. 

Home for Destitute Crippled Children.. 
141 West Sixty-first St. 

Home for the Friendless. 

936 Woody Crest Ave. 

Howard Mission. 

225 East Eleventh St. 

Institution of Mercy 7 . 

1075 Madison Ave.' 

Messiah Home for Children. 

East One hundred and seventy-sev¬ 
enth St. and Aqueduct Ave. 

Mission of the Immaculate Virgin. 

375 Lafayette St. 


68 


New York Nursery and Child’s Hos¬ 
pital (Boarding-cut Department). 

161 West Sixty-fiist St. 


Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of children received. 

Year founded. 

Colored children received. 

Number of cottages. 

Roman Catholic Orphan 

Friendless Catholic boys.... 

1890 

Yes. 


Asylum Society of Brook- 




lyn. 





Private corporation. 

Destitute children. 

1843 

No. 


Fiivate corporation. 

Orphan and destitute chil¬ 
dren. 

1885 

Yes. 

.... 

Lutheran Augustana Synod. 

Orphan and destitute chil¬ 
dren. 

1883 

No. 

.... 

Society of St. Johnland. 

Orphan and friendless chil¬ 
dren. 

1866 

No. 

5 

Private organization. 

Homeless children. 

1876 

Yes. 


Sisters of St. Joseph. 

Foundlings, and orphan and 
homeless children. 

1908 

Yes. 

.... 

Society for the Protection of 
Destitute Catholic Children 

Homeless and destitute boys 
from 7 to 14. 

1864 

Yes. 

.... 

Sisters of St. Joseph... 

Orphan beys. 

1849 

Yes. 

.... 

Private corporation. 

Homeless and orphan chil¬ 
dren undei 16. 

1871 

Yes. 

3 

County of Orange. 

Dependent children. 

1881 

Yes. 

.... 

Private corporation. 

Orphan and homeless chil¬ 
dren. 

1884 

Yes. 

.... 

Private corporation (Luth- 

Orphan children from 4 to 10. 

1864 

No. 

7 

eran). 





Sisters Marianites of Holy 

Destitute orphan children... 

1858 

No. 


Cross. 




Private corporation. 

Destitute children. 

1837 

Yes. 

7 

Private corporation. 

Crippled children. 

1S99 

( 6 ) 

.... 

Sisters of St. Dominic. 

Dependent children. 

1876 

No. 


Private corporation. 

Dependent children from 2 
to 14. 

1850 

No. 

3 

Children’s Aid Society. 

Homeless boys. 

1876 

Yes. 


Private corporation. 

Orphan and destitute chil¬ 
dren under 5. 

1895 

No. 

.... 

Private organization. 

Hebrew Sheltering Guar¬ 
dian Society. 

Orphan and dependent chil¬ 
dren from 5 to 12. 

Orphan and destitute chil¬ 
dren. 

1860 

1879 

No. 


Sisters of the Annunciation 

Crippled and incurable girls. 

1893 

No. 


(Episcopal). 




Private corporation. 

Destitute crippled children.. 

1903 

Yes. 

.... 

American Female Guardian 
Societv and Home for the 

Orphan and homeless chil¬ 
dren. 

1834 

No. 

.... 

Friendless. 





Private corporation. 

Orphan and neglected chil¬ 
dren. 

1860 

No. 

.... 

Sisters of Mercy. 

Orphan and indigent chil¬ 
dren. 

1846 

Yes. 

.... 

Private corporation. 

Children of self-supporting 
parents. 

1885 

No. 

.... 

Mission of the Immaculate 
Virgin for the Protection 

Homeless and destitute chil¬ 
dren. 

1870 

No. 

.... 

of Homeless and Destitute 
Childien. 





Private corporation. 

Homeless and indigent chil¬ 
dren. 

1854 

Yes. 

.... 


Paid employees at close of year. 

CHILDREN RECEIVED FOR 
TIME IN 1910. 

FIRST 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Through— 

Public officials. 

Officials of the 

institution. 

Child-placing 

societies. 

Relatives or 

friends o f child. 

Other agencies. 

0) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 



( 2 ) 

.... 

10 

17 

12 

5 

9 



8 


5 

20 

9 

11 

1 



19 


6 

4 

1 

3 

3 



1 


40 

24 

16 

8 




24 


7 

31 

IS 

13 

10 



21 


35 

284 

172 

112 

6 

18 


239 

21 

44 

394 

394 


237 



155 

2 

4 

130 

130 

.... 

31 

.... 

4 

95 


13 

69 

30 

39 

59 



10 


6 

16 

12 

4 

16 





12 

23 

15 

8 

14 



9 


22 

36 

19 

17 




36 


1 

57 

28 

29 

19 



38 


50 

83 

49 

34 

72 



11 


5 

6 

4 

2 




6 


67 

339 

222 

117 

309 



30 


24 

305 

180 

125 

221 


33 

34 

17 

12 

10S4 

10S4 






1084 

( 6 ) 

84 

45 

39 

82 



2 


151 

319 

189 

130 

319 





125 

279 

177 

102 

279 





3 

9 


9 





9 

3 

1 


1 





1 

( 6 ) 

158 

72 

86 

24 



133 

1 

5 

7 

4 

3 




7 


34 

246 

143 

103 

238 



8 


16 

( E ) 

(c) 

( 6 ) 




(6) 


33 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 6 ) 



( 8 ) 


61 

467 

251 

216 

405 



62 

.... 


1 Included in report of Roman Catholic Orphan Asylum Society, Brooklyn. 

2 Included in report of St, John’s Home, Brooklyn.’ 

3 Includes report of Sunset Cottage and St. John’s Inn. 

4 Exclusive of value of 500 acres of land. 


6 Not reported. 

* Includes special donation of $26,080. 

7 Corporate name. Includes report of St. Joseph’s Home fci Girls, 
1075 Madison Ave., N. Y., and Home for Boys, Tarrytown, N. Y. 



























































































































GENERAL TABLES 


127 


CARE OF CHILDREN: 1910 —Continued. 


CHILDREN IN THE INSTITUTION 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

AT 

CHILDREN 
OUTSIDE BUT 
UNDER 
SUPERVISION. 

CHILDREN 
PLACED IN 
FAMILIES 
DURING 
YEAR. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Dependent. 

Working boys or girls. 

Delinquent. 

Orphans and 
foundlings. 

Invalid or defec¬ 
tive. 

All other. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

125 

125 


( 2 ) 


( ? ) 









38 

29 

9 

6 


32 









18 

9 

9 

7 


11 









61 

34 

27 

49 


12 









85 

51 

34 

76 


9 









35 

19 

16 

17 


18 









312 

187 

125 

294 


18 









515 

515 


206 


309 



544 

544 


15 

15 


228 

228 


( £ ) 


( 5 ) 






5 

5 


68 

33 

35 

36 


32 



38 

20 

18 

24 

11 

13 

23 

17 

6 

15 

1 

7 






14 

5 

9 

63 

42 

21 

5 


58 






2 

1 

1 

257 

142 

115 

257 








14 


14 

187 

69 

118 

162 

2 

23 






5 

4 

1 

303 

178 

125 

264 


39 



22 

8 

14 

12 

2 

10 

20 

9 

11 


20 










574 

361 

213 

574 











242 

152 

90 

143 


99 



1 


1 

14 

6 

8 

88 

88 





88 








139 

74 

65 

122 


13 


4 







1205 

714 

491 

994 


211 



239 

126 

113 

106 

59 

47 

696 

408 

288 

696 





269 

143 

126) 

263 

139 

124 

24 


24 


24 










22 

11 

11 

19 


3 









195 

96 

99 

158 


37 



28 

6 

22 

4 

2 

2 

15 

8 

7 

15 





135 

60 

75 




862 

450 

^12 

506 


356 









( 5 ) 

( 5 ) 

( 5 ) 

( s ) 











( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 


( 8 ) 



























553 

280 

273 



















CHILDREN 
DISCHARGED 
DURING YEAR. 

R 

Total. 

ECEIPTS 

DURING YEAR 

Derived from— 


PAYMENTS DURING 
YEAR. 

VALUE OF 
PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number 

Total. 

c5 

*03 

o 

*c3 

B 

Eh 

Ap- 

pro- 

pria- 

tions. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources 

Total. 

For 

run¬ 

ning 

ex¬ 

penses. 

lor 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total 

(includ, 

mg 

in vested 
funds). 

band, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

(’) 

( 2 ) 

.... 

(>) 

o 

0) 

0) 

(’) 

0) 

o 

0) 

0) 

C 1 ) 

39 

22 

8 

14 

$8,161 

$3,034 

$50 

$368 

$4, 709 

$7,618 

$6,870 

$748 

$118,806 

$47,121 

40 

17 

8 

9 

3,119 

367 

1,429 

621 

702 

2,754 

2,754 


31,093 

18,500 

41 

10 

7 

3 

5,763 

1,918 

3,117 

110 

618 

11,983 

7,357 

4,626 

53,120 

53,120 

42 

37 

26 

11 

3 41,182 


7,317 

6,460 

27,405 

Ml,182 

37,047 

4,135 

4 279,543 

4 50,743 

43 

47 

22 

25 

5,900 


1,934 

2,638 

1,328 

5,164 

5,164 


28,000 

25,000 

44 

145 

86 

59 

13,775 

( s ) 

( 5 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 5 ) 

13,716 

13,716 


154,993 

154,993 

45 

461 

461 

.... 

123,452 

19,751 

15,367 

4,062 

84,272 

123,452 

114,720 

8, 732 

424,818 

424,818 

46 

107 

107 

.... 

26,938 

5,412 

188 

1,898 

19,440 

26,833 

26,468 

365 

110,333 

110,333 

47 

44 

23 

21 

9,554 

3,218 

1,509 

1,160 

3,667 

11,345 

10,651 

694 

100,683 

63,270 

48 

3 

2 

1 

6,585 

6,585 




6,591 

5,533 

1,058 

25,000 

25,000 

49 

20 

8 

12 

10,440 

450 

5,693 

4,297 

11,336 

10,156 

1,180 

65,448 

45,000 

50 

24 

7 

17 

32,270 


23,801 

6,748 

1,721 

29,973 

25,594 

4,379 

506,000 

500,000 

51 

63 

28 

35 

26,605 

9,507 

1,303 

6,355 

9,440 

24,903 

21,594 

3,309 

259,214 

208,7-14 

52 

91 

51 

40 

6 99,636 

35,072 

631,439 

1,424 

31,701 

72,595 

64,465 

8,130 

1,183,500 

515,000 

53 

( 5 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 5 ) 

4,705 


( s ) 

( 6 ) 

( 5 ) 

5,166 

( 4 ) 

( 5 ) 

29,500 

29,500 

54 

311 

203 

108 

134,368 

122,474 

2,880 

1,959 

7,055 

133,181 

133,181 

. 

571,703 

571,703 

55 

248 

128 

120 

50,245 

23,626 

7,991 

1,522 

17,106 

50,245 

49,494 

751 

463,160 

347,012 

56 

1073 

1073 

.... 

10*610 

4,060 

1,720 

3,791 

1,039 

10,610 

10,610 


110,000 

110,000 

57 

97 

55 

42 

50,657 

( s ) 

( s ) 

w 

( 6 ) 

39,484 

( 5 ) 

( 5 ) 

380,000 

( 5 ) 

58 

392 

232 

160 

327,550 

157,674 

118,428 


51,448 

383,972 

383,972 


1,399,240 

567,000 

59 

283 

169 

114 

151,868 

106,766 

34, 713 

264 

10,125 

157,758 

152,606 

5,152 

214,100 

200,000 

60 

5 


5 

40,526 


18,275 


22,251 

39,054 

16,905 

22,149 

181,600 

180,000 

61 

4 

4 


5,232 


3,107 

46 

2,079 

5,053 

4,852 

201 

67,766 

27,84S 

62 

125 

63 

62 

201,278 

112,169 

45,151 

3,613 

40,345 

165,121 

165,121 


615,902 

336,250 

63 

15 

7 

8 

5,971 


3,053 


2,918 

5,093 

5,093 


98,095 

43,599 

64 

319 

147 

172 

119,276 

115,078 

1,181 

1,588 

1,429 

116,846 

113,555 

3,291 

491,769 

491,769 

65 

( 8 ) 

m 

( 5 ) 

9,302 


2,220 

3,203 

3,879 

<•) 

« 

( s ) 

n 

( s ) 

66 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

9 412,500 

164,286 


20,443 

227,771 

9 407, 734 

397,652 

10,082 

9 1,774,040 

1,741,540 

67 

565 

276 

289 

(10) 

(10) 

(10) 

(10) 

(10) 

(10) 

(>0) 


(10) 

(10) 

68 


8 Statistics for inmates reported under branch institutions. 

9 Includes finances for St. Elizabeth’s Home for Girls, St. Joseph’s Asylum for Blind Girls, and St. Joseph’s Home for Boys, Mt. Loretto, S. I. 

10 Included in report of New York Nursery and Child’s Hospital (Hospital Department). 























































































































































128 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table I.— INSTITUTIONS FOR THE 


.a 

S 


69 

70 

71 

72 

73 

74 

75 

76 

77 

78 

79 

80 
81 
82 

83 

84 
83 

86 

87 

88 

89 

90 

91 

92 

93 

94 

as 

96 

97 

98 

99 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


NEW YORK—Continued. 

New York City—C ontinued. 

Bronx and Manhattan Boroughs —Contd. 

Newsboys’ Lodging House 1 . 

14 New Chambers St. 

New York Catholic Protectory 2 . 

Westchester P. O. 

Orphans’ Home and Asylum. 

168 Convent Ave. 

Protestant Half Orphan Asylum. 

110 Manhattan Ave. 

Roman Catholic Orphan Asylum. 

Sedgwick Ave. and Kingsbridge 
Road. 

St. Joseph’s Asylum. 

Eighty-ninth St. and Avenue A. 

St. Joseph’s Home for Girls 5 . 

1075 Madison Ave. 

St. Philip’s Home for Industrious Boys. 
417 Broome St. 

Sevilla Home for Children. 

Hunt’s Point (Bronx). 

Sheltering Arms.. 

504 West One hundred and twenty- 
ninth St. 

William H. Davis Free Industrial 
School for Crippled Children. 

471 West Fifty-seventh St. 
Brooklyn Borough — 

Angel Guardian Home 2 . 

Twelfth Ave. and Sixty-fourth St. 

Brooklyn Baptist Orphanage.. 

1502 Coney Island Ave. 

Brooklyn Hebrew Orphan Asylum- 

373 Ralph Ave. 

Brooklyn Howard Colored Orphan 
Asylum. 

1550 Dean St. 

Brooklyn Orphan Asylum.. 

1435 Atlantic Ave. 

Brooklyn Training School and Home 
for Young Girls. 

1483 Pacific St. 

Children’s Society (Receiving Home).. 
105 Schermerhom St. 


Convent of the Sisters of Mercy 11 . 

273 Willoughby Ave. 

Home for Destitute Children.. 

217 Sterling Place. 

Kallman Scandinavian Orphanage- 

Sixty-seventh St. and Eighteenth 
Ave. 

Orphan Home of the Dominican Nuns. 
153 Graham Ave. 

Orphan House. 

Albany Ave. and Herkimer St. 

St. John’s Home. 

992 St. Mark’s Ave. 

St. Joseph’s Female Orphan Asylum... 
Willoughby and Sumner Aves. 

St. Malachy’s Horned. 

Atlantic and Van Siclen Aves. 

St. Paul’s Industrial School.•. 

Congress and Clinton Sts. 


Sheltering Arms Nursery. 

157 Dean St. 

Queens Borough- 

College PointiJj. /.)— 

Bethlehem Orphans’ Home. 

Second Ave. 

Jamaica ( L. I .)— 

Ottilie Orphan Asylum. 

Kaplan and D'egraw Aves. 

Richmond Borough — 

Oreen Ridge (S. 7.)— 

St. Michael’s Home. 

424 West Thirty-fourth St., N. Y. 

(office). 

1 Temporary shelter. 

2 Delinquent inmates included in Report on Juvenile Delinquents also. 
8 Not reported. 

* Boarders. 

6 Included in report of Institution of Mercy. 







i 

© 

»>» 

CHILDRE 

Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of children received. 

Year founded. 

Colored children receive< 

Number of cottages. 

© 

Vi 

jD 

ci 

' V) 

© 

© 

o 

ft 

s 

© 

32 

*3 

ft 

Total. 

Male. 

Children’s Aid Society. 

Homeless working boys. 

1854 

Yes. 


13 

3677 

3677 

Roman Catholic Church. 

Dependent and delinquent 
children. 

1863 

Yes. 

... 

120 

1700 

1474 

Private corporation. 

Orphan children. 

1852 

No. 

... 

17 

25 

9 

Private corporation. 

Protestant half-orphan 
children. 

1835 

No. 

... 

27 

44 

29 

Board of Managers, Roman 

Orphan children. 

1817 

No. 


63 

171 

98 

Catholic Orphan Asylum. 








School Sisters of Notre Dame 

Sisters of Mercv. 

Orphan children from 2 to 16. 

Girls from 2 to 16. 

1857 

No. 

... 

24 

269 

188 

New York Catholic Protec- 

Dependent boys. 

1902 

Yes. 

2 

9 

100 

100 

tory. 

Indigent girls from 5 to 10... 







Private corporation. 

1889 

( 6 ) 

... 

17 

29 


Private corporation.. 

Homeless children. 

1864 

No. 

Yes. 

6 

27 

83 

38 

Private corporation. 

Sisters of Mercv. 

Crippled children. 

Destitute children. 

1900 


8 

16 

10 

Private corporation(Baptist) 

Orphan and neglected chil¬ 
dren. 

1893 

No. 

... 

4 

7 

3 

Private corporation. 

Orphan and destitute chil¬ 
dren. 

1878 

No. 

... 

64 

244 

152 

Private corporation.. 

Orphan and destitute chil¬ 
dren from 2 to 16. 

1868 

Yes. 

... 

41 

47 

25 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Orphan and destitute chil¬ 
dren. 

Destitute girls from 12 to 16.. 

1833 

1889 

No. 

No. 

... 

37 

6 

111 

42 

58 

Brooklyn Society for the 
Prevention of Cruelty to 

Destitute, neglected, and 
delinquent children. 

1880 

Yes. 

... 

43 

4042 

3231 

Children. 








Sisters of Mercv. 

Destitute children and home¬ 
less mothers with Infants. 

1855 

Yes. 

... 

92 

613 

248 

Private corporation.. 

Destitute children. 

1854 

No. 

No. 


49 

123 

76 

Private corporation. 

Scandinavian orphan and 
indigent children. 

1897 

... 

6 

33 

17 

Sisters of St. Dominic. 

Orphan, neglected, and in¬ 
digent children. 

1868 

No. 

... 

135 

235 

148 

Protestant Episcopal Church 

Roman Catholic Orphan 
Asylum Society of Brook- 

Orphan children. 

1852 

No. 


17 

57 

34 

Destitute Catholic boys. 

1834 

Yes. 

... 

( 13 ) 

14 400 

1 

14 400 

lvn. 








Roman Catholic Orphan 

Catholic orphan girls. 

1873 

Yes. 

... 

( 13 ) 

is 200 


Asylum Society of Brook¬ 
lyn. 







Sisters of St. Joseph. 

Roman Catholic Orphan 

Dependent children. 

Catholic orphan girls. 

1876 

1839 

Yes. 

Yes. 

... 

65 

( 13 ) 

386 

( 17 ) 

195 

Asylum Society of Brook¬ 
lyn. 






Protestant Episcopal Church 

Destitute children over 1 
month old. 

1870 

No. 

... 

22 

82 

42 

Private corporation (Lu- 

Orphan children. 

1886 

No. 


13 

28 

16 

theran). 








Private corporation (Ger- 
man Reformed and Pres- 

Orphan and dependent chil¬ 
dren. 

1S92 

No. 

... 

15 

46 

31 

byterian). 








Presentation Nuns. 

Destitute Roman Catholic 
children under 16. 

1884 

Yes. 

... 

7 




time in 1910. 


226 

16 

15 

73 

81 


29 

45 


4 

92 

22 

53 

42 

811 

365 

47 

16 

87 

23 

15200 

191 

( 17 ) 

40 

12 

15 


Through- 


1653 


246 


96 

8 


39| 

66 

( 3 ) 

2301 

568 

81 


235 

30 
i<317 

1G50 

386 

( 17 ) 

31 


24 


o 

fi 

o 


1716 


Hi'S 

rd 

u 


Vi •<-« 
•■§ 
o 
w 
a'O 
© 


25 


47 

25 

44 

171 

23 


2 

73 

10 


7 

244 

7 

45 


45 

42 

33 


27 

i<83 

15 50 


(”) 

51 

28 

22 


3677 


u> 


( 3 ) 


6 Indeterminate. 

7 Included in report of the Convent of the Sisters of Mercy. 

8 Includes 11 boarders. 

s Includes 82,280 paid on mortgage. 

i° Included in report of Brooklyn Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children. 













































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


129 


CARE OF CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


CHILDREN IN THE INSTITUTION AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 


CHILDREN 
OUTSIDE BUT 


CHILDREN 
PLACED IN 


Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Dependent. 

Working boys or girls. 

Delinquent. 

UNDER 

SUPERVISION. 

DURING 

YEAR. 

Orphans and 
foundlings. 

Invalid or deiec- 
tive. 

All other. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

i 

118 

118 





118 








2347 

1822 

525 



14S3 


864 

199 

199 


43 

16 

27 

83 

36 

47 

83 








1 

1 


157 

94 

63 

157 








2 


2 

997 

526 

471 

997 











747 

483 

264 

666 


4 81 























37 

37 




37 



19S 

19S 





61 


61 

46 


15 









176 

73 

103 

88 


88 






2 


2 

55 

30 

25 


55 







8 

6 

2 

22 

13 

9 

22 











305 

297 

208 

400 


105 



5 

5 


5 

5 


255 

143 

112 



255 



23 

5 

18 

1 


1 

117 

61 

56 

75 


42 



10 

3 

7 

2 


2 

63 


63 



8 63 









36 

16 

20 



21 


15 




328 

251 

77 

21489 

503 

986 

1015 


474 



379 

180 

199 

29 

12 

17 

167 

93 

74 

160 

7 




5 

4 

1 

2 

2 


68 

34 

34 

61 


7 



1 


1 




202 

112 

90 

136 


66 









106 

54 

52 

61 


45 



3 


3 

3 


3 

H1270 

1270 


958 


312 








.... 

is 605 


605 

313 


292 



44 


44 




349 

197 

152 

349 











(17) 

( 17 ) 

( 17 ) 


( 17 ) 









78 

43 

35 

34 


4 44 









124 

63 

61 

124 











109 

4C 

60 

94 


If 






1 


1 

153 

65 

91 

153 























CHILDREN 

DISCHARGED 


O 

H 


3559 

1956 

10 

49 

149 

290 


3559 

1703 

4 

28 

88 

185 


RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 


Total. 


253 

6 

21 

61 

105 


820,077 
349,573 
28,006 
29,210 

( 3 ) 

96,554 


Derived from— 


Ap- 

pro- 

pria- 

tions. 


S3,496 
327,151 


2,550 

( 3 ) 

85,180 


Dona¬ 

tions. 


Care of 
in¬ 
mates 


SI,799 
3,869 
2,006 
4,940 
( 3 ) 

6,358 


Other 

sources 


S2,117 
3,510 


9,257 

( 3 ) 

3,835 

6,304 

3,917 


$12,665 
15,043 
26,000 
12,463 
( 3 ) 

1,181 


PAYMENTS DURING 
YEAR. 


Total. 


$20,077 
414,965 
28,006 
29,770 
( 3 ) 

78,012 


For 

run¬ 

ning 

ex¬ 

penses. 


$20,077 
379,056 
23,670 
27,770 
( 3 ) 

71,611 


For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments 


$35,909 
4,336 
2,000 
( 3 ) 

6,401 


VALUE OF 
PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 


Total 

(includ¬ 

ing 

invested 

funds). 


$294,000 
2,352,815 
875,137 
544,651 
( 3 ) 

970,000 


$214,000 
2,235,811 
225,000 
252,894 
( 3 ) 

970,000 


Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 


69 

70 

71 

72 

73 

74 

75 

76 

77 

78 

79 

80 
81 

82 

83 

84 

85 

86 

87 

88 

89 

90 

91 

92 

93 

94 

95 

96 

97 

98 


99 


39 

5 


3 

47 


15,037 
29,140 
56,570 

12,800 


8,327 
125 
22,485 

800 


406 
29,015 
30,168 

12,000 


15,044 

33,206 

40,341 

12,000 


15,044 
26,748 
33,710 

10,000 


6,458 

6,631 

2,000 


984,127 
999,433 

97,000 


310,000 

376,000 

27,000 


104 

83 

119 

24 

2321 

572 

134 

21 

357 

45 

14 428 

15 245 

335 

( l7 ) 

75 

23 

45 

83 


63 

43 

68 

1941 

219 

77 

12 

206 

26 

428 

186 

40 

13 

34 

45 


41 

40 

51 

24 

380 

353 

57 

9 

151 

19 

245 

149 

( 17 ) 

35 

10 
11 

38 


3,543 
75,433 
96,522 

44,428 
12,590 

( 10 ) 

235,636 

97,372 

8,888 

100,572 

13,656 

( l8 ) 

(18) 

115,760 
(18) 

10,295 

10,751 
18,652 


47,396 

29,350 

21,197 
4,169 

( 10 ) 


33,797 


25,794 


96,104 
8,379 

(IS) 

(18) 

105,608 

(13) 

5,468 


5,706 


24,221 


1,171 
26,180 
7,626 

9,463 

2,514 

( 10 ) 

15,782 
10,239 
2,220 

350 

436 

(13) 

(13) 

4,193 

(13) 

703 

5,976 

1,566 


1,561 

4,518 

1,036 


1,465 


172,931 

4,846 

1,954 

3,756 

1,498 

(13) 

(13) 

2,124 

(13) 

601 

3,924 

2,387 

108 


2,372 
1,857 
57,985 

9,250 
4,871 

( 10 ) 

46,923 
48,490 
4,714 

362 

3,343 

(13) 

(13) 

3,835 

(13) 

3,523 

851 

8,993 


3,176 
267,057 
83,00S 

83,662 
912,590 

( 10 ) 

181,587 

58,989 

8,888 

100,572 
13,473 

( 13 ) 

(13) 

143,745 

(13) 

11,459 

14,824 

12,988 

26,211 


3,176 

58,748 

79,623 

44,700 

910,292 

(i°) 

169,890 
52,401 
8,268 

97,783 

13,473 

(13) 

(13) 

111,473 

(13) 

11,459 

12,544 

12,988 

24,839 


208,309 

3,385 

38,962 
2,298 


11,697 

6,588 

620 

2,789 


(13) 

(13) 

32,272 

(13) 


2,280 


1,372 


17,750 

430,000 

136,000 

420,000 
29,493 

( 10 ) 

567,600 
451,850 
49,500 

377,390 

162,254 

(13) 

(IS) 

713,724 

(13) 

104,100 

32,000 

150,000 

73,023 


17,750 
425,000 
120,000 

250,000 

23,000 

(l°) 

567,600 

252,000 

49,500 

377,390 

94,800 

(13) 

(13) 

713,724 

(13) 

37,000 

30,000 

150,000 


73,Q23 


11 Includes report of the Angel Guardian Home, Twelfth Ave. and Sixty-fourth St., 
Brooklyn, and St. Mary of the Angels Home, Syosset, L. I. 

12 Exclusive of 33 homeless mothers with infants. 

«Included in report of Roman Catholic Orphan Asylum Society, Brooklyn. 


n Includes inmates of St. John’s Protectory, Hicksville, L. I. 

18 Includes inmates of St. Paul’s Industrial School. 

16 Includes report of St. Malachy’s Orphan Home, Rockaway Park, L. I. 

17 Included in report of St. Joseph’s Female Orphan Asylum. 


44153 °— 14 - 


-9 














































































































































































































130 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table I.— INSTITUTIONS FOR THE 


1 







h> 

CO 

CHILDREN RECEIVED 

FOR 

FIRST 








© 



TIME IN 

1910. 








-3 


o 













a) 

> 


© 

C/3 





Through— 


u, 

& 

E 

3 

P 

P 

.2 

3 





i 

© 

to 

a 

4-3 

O 

o 

o 

u 

© 

& 

o 








NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of children received. 

73 

© 

'O 

3 

3 

£ 

3 

hi 

2 

5 

o 

*3 

O' 

c3 

8 

© 

>> 

£ 

p< 

s 

O' 



© 

J3 

4 C3 

’© 

e 

o 

_o 

© 

3d 

v-t O 

OS 

a 3 

.03 ■*_> 

tn 

p 

■rt 

03 4 © 

Pi’S 

31 

h. 

o 

si 

►■s 

CO 

J 

<0 

*5 

s 

tp 

C3 

hi 

i 

M 




u 

03 

© 

o 

3 

o 

a 

3 

2 

c3 

pH 

03 

O 

H 

© 

a 

a 

© 

Ph 

3 

a 

P-H 

o <2 

g.a 

o 

ts » 

a 

u 

— P 
©.£ 

A 

■h> 

o 


NEW YORK—Continued. 
















New York City— Continued. 
















Richmond Borough —Continued. 















100 

Mount Loretto (S. 1 .)— 

Mission of the Immaculate 
Virgin. 

Homeless and destitute girls. 

(!) 

No. 


30 

144 

1 


144 

113 



31 


Prince Bay P. O. 







83 


101 

St. Joseph’s Home for Boys. 

Mission of the Immaculate 

Homeless and destitute boys. 

0) 

No. 

6 

196 

346 

346 


263 










Pleasant Plains P. O. 

New Brighton, (S. /.)— 

Virgin. 











42 



102 


Society for the Relief of Des¬ 
titute Children. 

Seamen’s destitute children 
from 2 to 10. 

1846 

Yes. 


17 

42 

18 

24 





Castleton Ave. 

Richmond County S. P. C. C. Home... 


(’) 





103 

Richmond County Society 

Ill-treated children, pending 

18S0 

Yes. 

1 

(>) 

C 1 ) 

C 1 3 * ) 






Castleton Ave. 

for the Prevention of 
Cruelty to Children. 

court action. 














Newburgh: 














104 

Children’s Home 


Dependent children. 

1SS5 

Yes. 


6 

10 

4 

6 

3 

7 




High St. 










31 


105 

Newburgh Home for the Friendless... 
165 Montgomery St. 


Orphan and needy children. 

1861 

No. 


6 

• 31 

15 

16 















Ogdensburg: 













30 


106 

United Helpers’ Home . 

Society of United Helpers.... 

Orphan, destitute, and 
homeless children. 

189S 

Yes. 


11 

45 

23 

22 

15 




250 State St. 









Oswego: 















107 

Oswego Orphan Asylum. 

Private corporation. 

Orphan, delinquent, and 
homeless children. 

1852 

Yes. 


9 

31 

16 

15 

7 

1 


14 

9 

Ellen St. 










108 

St. Francis’ Home. 


Orphan and homeless chil¬ 
dren. 

1895 

Yes. 


2 

15 

4 

11 

6 



9 


Syracuse Ave. 

St. Francis. 











Peekskill: 















109 

Noyes Memorial Home for Convalescent 

Sisters of St. Mary (Epis- 

Convalescent and incurable 

1889 

Yes. 

0) 

4 

17 

6 

11 


17 




25 


84 


32 

45 

no 

and Incurable Children. 

636 Main St. 

St. Ann’s Home for Destitute Children.. 
Mount Florence. 

copal). 

children. 

Destitute, orphan, and indi¬ 
gent girls. 

1857 

Yes. 


161 

161 


Sisters of the Good Shep¬ 
herd. 





111 

St. Joseph’s Home.. 

Missionary Sisters of the 
Third Order of St. Francis. 

Orphan and neglected chil¬ 
dren. 

1869 

No. 


26 

402 

235 

167 

372 



30 


250 South St. 








Peterboro: 















112 

Peterboro Home. 

Private corporation. 

Neglected children. 

1871 

Yes. 


6 

8 

2 

6 

8 





Plattsburg: 











113 

Home for the Friendless. 

Private corporation. 

Destitute and neglected chil¬ 
dren. 

1874 

Yes. 


6 

11 

3 

8 

1 



10 


9 Broad St. 











Port Jefferson, L. I.: 















114 

Brooklyn Home for Blind, Crippled, 
and Defective Children. 

Daughters of Wisdom.., 

Mentally and physically de¬ 
fective children under 16. 

1907 

0) 


0) 

42 

24 

18 

40 



2 









Port Jervis: 















115 

St. Mary’s Home. 

Sisters of Charity. 

Orphan and destitute chil¬ 
dren. 

1875 

No. 


6 

66 

23 

43 

41 



25 


56 Ball St. 








Poughkeepsie: 















116 

Home for the Friendless. 

Private corporation. 

Orphan and homeless chil¬ 
dren. 

1847 

No. 


8 

19 

12 

7 


1 


18 


91 South Hamilton St. 










Randolph: 















117 

Children’s Home. 

Western New York Society 
for the Protection of Home- 

Homeless and dependent 
children. 

1878 

Yes. 


32 

76 

47 

29 

51 


4 

21 












less and Dependent Chil¬ 
dren. 















Red Hook: 















118 

St. Margaret’s Home. 

Protestant Episcopal 
Church. 

Orphan girls. 

1854 

No. 


2 

1 


1 




1 


Rensselaer: 
















119 

St. John’s Orphan Asylum. 

Sisters of Mercy. 

Orphan and destitute chil¬ 
dren. 

1871 

Yes. 


6 

31 

18 

13 

23 



8 


Lawrence St. 








Rochester: 















120 

Jewish Orphan Asylum. 

Private corporation. 

Orphan and destitute chil¬ 
dren. 

1880 

No. 


6 

6 

3 

3 

4 



2 


924 St. Paul St. 












121 

Rochester Orphan Asylum. 

Private corporation. 

Orphan and destitute chil¬ 
dren. 

1837 

Yes. 

6 

23 

37 

19 

18 

20 


2 

12 

3 

1183 Monroe Ave.” 





122 

St. Joseph’s Orphan Asylum. 

Sisters of Notre Dame. 

Orphan children. 

1854 

No. 


i 

42 

19 

23 

10 



32 


305 Andrews St. 








123 

St. Mary’s Boys’ Orphan Asylum. 

Sisters of St. Joseph. 

Orphan boys from 4 to 14. 

1864 

No. 


10 

81 

SI 


37 



44 


409 West Ave. 









124 

St. Patrick’s Orphan Girls’ Asylum... 
160 Clifton St. 

Sisters of St. Joseph. 

Orphan and destitute girls 
and infants. 

1841 

No. 


10 

70 


63 

21 



49 









Rockaway Park, L. I.: 















125 

St. Malachy’s Orphan Home 6 . 

Sisters of St. Joseph. 

Dependent children. 













Rye: 















126 

St. Benedict’s Home for Destitute Col- 

Mission of the Immaculate 

Destitute and homeless chil- 

1886 

Yes. 


12 

34 

11 

23 

17 



17 


ored Children. 

Virgin. 

dren. 







Saratoga Springs: 





5 









127 

Hawley Home for Children. 

Private corporation. 

Normal children from 3 to 10. 

1SSS 

Yes. 


22 

11 

11 

9 



13 


64 Ludlow St. 






128 

St. Christina Industrial School. 

Sisters of the Holy Child 
(Episcopal). 

Girls who must become self- 

1S85 

No. 

1 

6 

19 


19 

3 



15 

1 

Ballston Ave. 

supporting. 







Schenectady: 















129 

Children’s Home.. . 

Private corporation. 

Orphan, homeless, neg¬ 
lected, or indigent chil- 

1SS8 

No. 


9 

23 

16 



20 



3 

1216 State St. 











dren. 














Spring Valley: 















130 

Cherry Tree Home. 

Salvation Army. 

Orphan and destitute chil¬ 
dren. 

1895 

No. 

3 

19 

36 

24 

12 



1 

34 

1 

South Main St. 






Syosset, L. I.: 















131 

St. Mary of the Angels Home 7 . 

Sisters of Mercy. 

Homeless boys from 5 to 14... 





1. 

.... 

.... 







1 Not reported. 

2 Included in report of Mission of the Immaculate Virgin, New York City. 

3 Included in report of St. Mary’s Free Hospital for Children, New York City. 

* Includes 57 boarders. 








































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


131 


CARE OF CIIILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


CHILDREN IN THE 
CLOSE OF 

INSTITUTION 

YEAR. 

AT 

CHILDREN 
OUTSIDE BUT 
UNDER 
SUPERVISION. 

CHILDREN 
PLACED IN 
FAMILIES 
DURING 
YEAR. 

CHILDREN 
DISCHARGED 
DURING YEAR. 

RECEIPTS 

DURING YEAR. 

PAYMENTS DURING 
YEAR. 

VALUE OF 
PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

1 Institution number. 

Total. 

6 

a 

Female. 

Dependent. 

Working boys or girls. 

Delinquent. 

Total. 

Derived from— 

Orphans and 
foundlings. 

Invalid or defec¬ 
tive. 

All other. 

rt 

+-> 

o 

H 

H 

a 

Female. 

*C3 

O 

H 

6 

ca 

a 

Female. 

o 

H 

"3 

a 

Female. 

Ap- 
pro- 
p na¬ 
tions. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources 

Total. 

For 

run¬ 

ning 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total 

(includ¬ 

ing 

invested 

funds). 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

495 


495 



495 









209 


209 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

100 

1106 

1106 




1106 









465 

465 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

101 

112 

54 

58 



112 









28 

(>) 

(») 

$22,367 

$916 

$1,055 

$20,396 

$21,408 

$19,810 

$1,598 

$302,500 

$5,000 

102 

153 

( l ) 

(!) 



153 










1,700 

$1,000 

103 

597 

2,018 

2,018 

6,000 

6,000 

103 

39 

21 

18 

24 

1 

14 



40 

21 

19 

4 

3 

1 

27 

15 

12 

7,063 

6,690 


373 


7,063 

6,253 

810 

14,810 

14,810 

104 

28 

15 

13 

(0 

0) 

0) 

C 1 ) 

(>) 




2 

2 


22 

10 

12 

4,941 

760 

323 

3,858 

4,481 

4,101 

380 

101,206 

20,000 

105 

38 

22 

16 

19 

19 

15 

6 

9 

23 

10 

13 

27 

12 

15 

7,545 

975 

2,256 

3,935 

379 

31,195 

6,195 

25,000 

49,271 

40,000 

106 

31 

14 

17 

11 


15 


5 




14 

7 

7 

34 

23 

ii 

4,694 

100 

1,125 

2,459 

1,010 

5,445 

5,445 


42,600 

25,000 

107 

67 

32 

35 

40 


26 


1 







25 

14 

11 

6,620 

3,462 

1,537 

1,151 

470 

5,900 

5,116 

784 

15,007 

13,000 

108 

20 

9 

11 

20 











9 

3 

6 

11,408 

2,774 


8,634 

6,734 

4,255 

2,479 

( 3 ) 

( s ) 

109 

401 


401 



4 401 



100 


100 

34 


34 

129 


129 

46,315 

43,350 


2,756 

209 

47,225 

45,025 

2,200 

330,000 

330,000 

110 

1118 

624 

494 

1118 











297 

174 

123 

165,304 

140,565 

712 

3,588 

20,439 

163,434 

151,144 

12,290 

330,000 

330,000 

111 

48 

26 

22 

17 


31 



8 

5 

3 

10 


3 

16 

10 

6 

6,033 

4,879 



1,154 

6,033 

5, 747 

286 

40,992 

24,837 

112 

30 

14 

16 

17 


13 









8 

4 

4 

4,970 

328 

1,355 

977 

2,310 

4,720 

4,720 


26,586 

14,000 

113 

166 

85 

81 


166 







1 


1 

18 

9 

9 

31,493 

23,759 

5,282 

891 

1,561 

37,553 

12,776 

24,777 

125,000 

125,000 

114 

158 

74 

84 

153 


5 









46 

18 

28 

14,952 

7,837 

3,888 

1,963 

1,264 

14,962 

14,083 

879 

52,664 

52,664 

115 

45 

25 

20 

28 


17 



2 

1 

1 

2 

1 

1 

25 

17 

8 

9,440 

719 

2,448 


6, 273 

8,603 

8,430 

173 

148,000 

23,000 

116 

118 

73 

45 

38 

3 

52 

.... 

25 

108 

65 

43 

23 

10 

13 

75 

44 

31 

28,089 

1,325 

7,158 

17,681 

1,925 

26,314 

26,314 


186,932 

112,151 

117 

13 


13 

13 














(!) 




0) 

4,522 

2,522 

2,000 

c) 

10,000 

118 

71 

41 

30 

71 








4 

4 


8 

3 

5 

6,157 

4,292 

195 

1,487 

183 

6,182 

5,613 

569 

20,000 

20,000 

119 

26 

15 

11 

20 


6 









7 

4 

3 

13,415 

2,001 

203 

75 

11,136 

9, 740 

9,152 

588 

89,568 

15,000 

120 

120 

67 

53 

116 

2 


2 








29 

13 

16 

127,880 

5,341 

6,074 

3,580 

112,885 

20,785 

18,773 

2,012 

323,626 

138,455 

121 

115 

68 

47 

97 


18 






2 

2 


45 

17 

28 

32,402 

6,367 

700 

4,428 

20,907 

36,452 

15,534 

20,918 

75,000 

35,000 

122 

205 

205 

165 


40 






4 

4 


70 

70 


5 61,570 

13,392 

726 

3,485 

43,967 

61,167 

20,527 

40,640 

171,000 

171,000 

123 

1 QQ 

K 

133 

94 


44 



11 


11 

51 

2 

49 




38,303 

8,715 

273 

2,273 

27,042 

37,747 

13,536 

24,211 

125,500 

125,500 

124 

loo 





















125 

148 

63 

85 

112 


36 






2 


2 

38 

19 

19 

25,650 

9,297 

14,875 

894 

584 

25,564 

23,161 

2,403 

70,000 

70,000 

126 

12 

6 

6 

12 








~ 


2 

11 

5 

6 

5,193 

632 

2,464 

957 

1,140 

3,412 

3,201 

211 

38,750 

21,000 

127 


48 

19 


36 









20 


20 

13,353 


7,581 

1,893 

3,879 

10,534 

10,534 


0) 

60,000 

128 

So 

qe 

Ol 

So 

1 A 

91 


14 



1 


1 




29 

19 

10 

5,994 

2,384 

2,042 

1,499 

69 

5,644 

5,644 


27,124 

27,124 

129 

oO 

Zi 







on 

13 

17 

1 

1 


23 

12 

11 

16,125 


13,939 

2,186 


16,125 

16,125 


60,000 

60,000 

130 

86 

4/ 

39 

ol 





oU 

















131 


6 Includes 833,000 borrowed to pay for new building. 

t Included in report of St. Malachy’s Home, Atlantic and Van Siclen Aves., Brooklyn. 

7 Included in report of Convent of the Sisters of Mercy, Brooklyn. 














































































































































































132 

t 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table I.— INSTITUTIONS FOR THE 


¥ 

XI 

a 

9 

9 

D 

o 


132 

133 

134 

135 

136 

137 

138 
139. 

140 

141 
142'" 

143 

144 

145 

146 


147 

148 


149 

150 

151 

152 

153 

154 


10 


11 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


NEW YORK—Continued. 


Syracuse: 

House of Providence. 

1420 West Onondaga St. 
Onondaga Orphans’ Home.... 

1007 East Genesee St. 

St. Vincent’s Orphan Asylum. 
120 Madison St. 


Tarrytown: 

Home for Boys 8 . 

Tivou: 

Watts de Peyster Industrial Home. 

Madalin P. O. 

Troy: 

Catholic Male Orphan Asylum. 

Hanover and Bedford Sts. 

Guardian Angel Home. 

Peoples Ave. and Eleventh St. 

Humane Society Home. 

77 Fourth St. 

St. Joseph’s Home. 

Thompson St. 

St. Vincent’s Female Orphan Asylum. 
180 Eighth St. 

Troy Orphan Asylum. 

Spring Ave. 

Utica: 

House of the Good Shepherd. 

704 Genesee St. 

St. John’s Catholic Orphan Asylum... 
80 John St. 

St. Joseph’s Infant Home. 

Green and Addison Sts. 

Utica Orphan Asylum. 

475 Genesee St. 

Valhalla: 

Brace Farm School. 

Jennie Clarkson Home for Children 


Verbank: 

Hope Farm. 

One hundred and seventy-first St. 
• and Fulton Ave., N. Y. (office). 

Watertown: 

Jefferson County Orphan Asylum. 

506 Franklin St. 

Watervliet: 

Fairview Home. 

Boght Road, R. D. 

St. Colman’s Industrial School and Or¬ 
phan Asylum. 

West Park: 

Sacred Heart Orphan Asylum. 

Manresa. 

Yonkers: 

Lake and Watts Orphan House. 

463 Hawthorne Ave. 

NORTH CAROLINA. 

Asheville: 

Children’s Home. 

Woolsev. 

Eliada Orphanage. 

R.D.3. 

BaCfour: 

Mountain Orphanage. 


Barium Springs: 

Presbyterian Orphans’ Home. 


Belmont: 

Sacred Heart Orphanage.. 

Charlotte: 

Alexander Home. 

303 South McDowell St. 

St. Michael’s Training and Industrial 
School. 

Mint and West Hill Sts. 

Thompson Orphanage.. 

East Ave. 

Crescent: 

Nazareth Orphans’ Home. 


Elon Coilege: 

Christian Orphanage. 


Marion: 

Elhanan Orphanage. 
Elbanan P. O. 


Supervised or conducted by— 


Sisters of Charity (St. Vin¬ 
cent de Paul). 

Private corporation,. 


Sisters of Charity. 
Sisters of Mercy.. 


Woman’s Home Missionary 
Society, M. E. Church. 

Private corporation. 


Sisters of the Good Shep¬ 
herd. 

Mohawk and Hudson River 
Humane Society. 

Sisters of St. Joseph. 


Sisters of Charity (St. Vin¬ 
cent de Paul). 

Private corporation. 


Private corporation (Episco¬ 
pal). 

Sisters of Charity. 


Sisters of Charity.... 
Private corporation. 


Children’s Aid Society. 
Private corporation 


Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 
State of New York.. 


Missionary Sisters of the 
Sacred Heart. 


Private corporation. 


County of Buncombe. 
Private corporation... 


Presbyterian Church in the 
United States. 

Presbyterian Church in the 
United States. 

Sisters of Mercy. 


Presbyterian Church of Chai- 
lotte. 

Private organization (Epis¬ 
copal). 

Private corporation (Epis¬ 
copal). 

Reformed Church in the 
United States. 

Southern Christian Conven¬ 
tion. 


Class of children received. 


Destitute and abandoned 
boys and boarders. 

Destitu te and neglected chil¬ 
dren. 

Orphan, destitute, and 
abandoned girls from 2 to 
14. 


Destitute boys from 2 to 16. 


Orphan, homeless, and des¬ 
titute girls. 

Orphan and destitute boys.. 

Abandoned, neglected, and 
delinquent girls. 

Delinquent and neglected 
children. 

Foundlings, and orphan and 
homeless children. 

Destitute girls. 


Orphan and destitute chil¬ 
dren. 

Neglected and destitute chil¬ 
dren under 10. 

Orphan and homeless girls 
from 5 to 16. 

Orphan and destitute in¬ 
fants. 

Orphan and destitute chil¬ 
dren. 


Homeless boys. 

Orphan and dependent chil¬ 
dren. 

Dependent children. 


Orphan and homeless chil¬ 
dren. 

Orphan and homeless chil¬ 
dren from 4 to 16. 

Orphan children. 


Orphan and destitute girls.. 
Orphan children.. 


Orphan and indigent chil¬ 
dren. 

Homeless and neglected 
children. 

Homeless and destitute chil¬ 
dren. 

Orphan children. 


Orphan girls. 

Needy children 
Neglected children. 


Orphan, defective, and 
homeless children. 

Orphan and destitute chil¬ 
dren. 

Orphan and destitute chil¬ 
dren. 


Foundlings, and orphan and 
destitute children. 


21 


Private organization. 

nan F. o. 

1 Not reported. 2 Included in report of Institution of Mercy, New York City. * Included in report of Mohawk and Hudson River Humane Society, Albany 


Year founded. 

Colored children received. 

Number of cottages. 

Paid employees at close of year. 

CH 

Total. 

1873 

No. 


5 

121 

1839 

Yes. 


*19 

87 

1860 

No. 

.... 

6 

92 

1894 

No. 

.... 

8 

16 

1852 

Yes. 

.... 

10 

100 

1908 

No. 

.... 

2 

42 

1897 

Yes. 

.... 

4 

377 

1892 

Yes. 

. ... 

11 

136 

1848 

Yes. 

.... 

6 

33 

1833 

Yes. 

.... 

46 

133 

1872 

Yes. 

. . . . 

15 

56 

1834 

Yes. 

.... 

6 

47 

1893 

Yes. 

.... 

21 

133 

1830 

Yes. 


30 

59 

1S93 

Yes. 

2 

20 

1258 

1S92 

No. 

2 

6 

9 

1906 

No. 

5 

34 

35 

1852 

Yes. 

.... 

7 

117 

1888 

Yes. 

. . . . 

21 

41 

1881 

No. 

.... 

5 

178 

18S9 

No. 

.... 

7 

84 

1838 

No. 

.... 

34 

4 

1891 

No. 


3 

15 

1906 

No. 

.... 

1 

4 

1903 

No. 

.... 

3 

4 

1888 

No. 

6 

25 

42 

1894 

No. 




1895 

No. 

1 

3 

( l ) 

1884 

(?) 

.... 

7 

65 

1887 

No. 

2 

9 

18 

1906 

No. 

2 

5 

2 

1907 

No. 

1 

4 

12 

1898 

No. 

2 

.... 

40 


time in 1910. 


121 

51 


100 

258 

68 

69 

32 

68 

28 


1258 
5 


20 


(>) 

22 

12 

2 

3 

21 


36 

92 


16 

42 

119 

68 

33 

64 

24 

47 

65 
31 


3 

4 

22 


0) 

43 


9 

19 


Through— 


46 
68 

47 


73 

20 

377 

86 

20 

115 

45 

5 

107 

27 


1258 


28 

0) 

24 

153 

15 


(>) 


o> 

C 
o 

0*2 


03 

O H 

e-S 

o 


25 


<>) 


( l ) 

25 


60 

e 

§8 


28 

Cm 

fi 

o 


C 1 ) 


0) 


O XJ 
co 7 
© r*3 
> 

—• o 

+* CO 
cS'O 
— G 
© 


74 

19 

45 


16 

26 

22 


50 

13 

10 

8 

17 

26 

32 


( l ) 

17 


(>) 


25 


(>) 

40 

15 

2 


(>) 














































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


133 


CARE OF CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


CHILDREN IN THE INSTITUTION 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

AT 

CHILDREN 
OUTSIDE BUT 
UNDER 
SUPERVISION. 

CHILDREN 
PLACED IN 
FAMILIES 
DURING 
YEAR. 

CHILDREN 
DISCHARGED 
DURING YEAR. 

RECEIPTS 

DURING YEAR 


Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Dependent. 

Working boys or girls. 

Delinquent. 

Total. 

Derived from— 


Orphans and 
foundlings. 

Invalid or defec¬ 
tive. 

All other. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Ap- 

pro- 

pria- 

tions. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources 

203 

203 


136 


67 









58 

58 


*li 687 

&8 Q37 

Si 544 

*9 290 

$i sin 

192 

113 

79 

15 

.... 

175 

.... 

2 




21 

12 

9 

93 

60 

33 

29,231 

11,833 

10,896 

3,701 

2,801 

222 


222 

152 

1 

69 



(') 


0) 

2 


2 

144 

.... 

144 

26,788 

15,277 

4,646 

3.520 

3,345 

58 


58 

48 


10 









6 


6 

8 100 


7 600 


500 

244 

244 

.... 

181 

• • • • 

62 


1 




14 

14 


98 

98 


39,224 

30,763 

993 

1,369 

6,099 

80 


80 



43 


37 







29 


29 

19 761 

9 119 

1 970 

1 498 

7 ISO 
















(l) 

(l) 



( 3 1 


( 3 ) 

268 

147 

121 

90 


178 






5 

2 

3 

78 

\ / 

47 

31 

v ) 

21 926 

V ) 

20,437 

99 fifi9 

v ) 

294 

1 195 

206 


206 

206 





8 


8 

8 


8 

57 


57 

95 677 

661 

874 

1 460 

244 

140 

104 

96 

1 

144 

.... 

3 

55 

25 

30 

27 

13 

14 

129 

69 

60 

80,650 

30,316 

8,532 

1,568 

40,234 

130 

77 

53 

55 


75 



3 

2 

1 

3 

1 

2 

73 

39 

34 

24 773 

17,808 

15 995 

1 368 

2 568 

3 099 

159 


159 

125 


34 



1 


1 

1 


1 

28 

28 

20 123 

85 

971 

3 072 

139 

68 

71 

61 


78 








113 

59 

54 

16 402 

14 180 

1,219 

992 

11 

148 

75 

73 

81 


67 






(i 

3 

3 

49 

28 

21 

32 190 

11 990 

4 809 

3 305 

12 086 

28 

28 





28 








565 

565 


30 438 

3 451 

102 

1 784 

25 101 

47 

28 

19 

47 





3 

1 

2 

3 

1 

2 

2 

1 

"i 

14,260 


114 


14^ 146 

146 

60 

86 

72 


74 



10 

3 

7 

7 



33 

13 

20 

66 140 

16 567 

47,678 

564 

1 331 

64 

39 

25 



64 









83 

36 

47 

21 580 

2 850 

14,003 

2,566 

2,161 

90 

56 

34 

60 


19 


11 

4 

1 

3 

2 

1 

1 

44 

31 

13 

21,615 

10,643 

811 

2,072 

8,089 

178 

84 

94 

136 


30 


12 




2 


2 

47 

19 

28 

20,552 

17,574 

2,978 



227 


227 

128 


4 99 






6 


6 

123 


123 

28,402 

9,969 

10,487 

5,348 

2,598 

86 

62 

24 

86 








3 

2 

1 

2 

2 


45,324 

960 

44,364 

0) 

(!) 

0) 

(i) 


0) 



45 

20 

25 

20 

10 

10 




1,800 

1,800 



23 

10 

13 

23 













5,083 


5,083 



54 

26 

28 

48 


6 






3 

1 

2 

0) 

0) 

(0 

1,042 


1,042 



180 

80 

100 

180 











9 

2 

7 

3,324 


2,234 


1,090 

25 


25 

25 











7 


7 

2,000 


375 


1,625 

18 

7 

11 

14 


4 












0) 

(>) 

0) 

(i) 

0 

80 

38 

42 



80 









3 


3 

1,850 

1,650 

200 

59 

28 

31 

57 

2 




(>) 

0) 

o 

4 

1 

3 

15 

9 

6 

9,387 


7,871 

234 

1,282 

22 

10 

12 

22 











2,500 


2,500 



45 

20 

25 

45 














4, 430 



4,430 

60 

24 

36 

36 

.... 

13 

11 

.... 

22 

7 

15 

22 

7 

15 

4 

2 

2 

6 5,208 


6 2,758 

450 

2,000 


PAYMENTS DURING 
YEAR. 

VALUE OF 
PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. I 

Total. 

For 

run¬ 

ning 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

* 

Total 

(includ¬ 

ing 

invested 

funds). 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

111,643 

$11,643 


$175,000 

$175,000 

132 

33,711 

31,432 

82,279 

151,917 

116,446 

133 

26,614 

23,626 

2,98S 

123,500 

123,500 

134 

1 

7,850 

7,350 

500 

60,000 

50,000 

136 

36,637 

32,572 

4,065 

128,739 

128,739 

137 

12,761 

8,850 

3,911 

74,000 

74,000 

138 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


( 8 > 

( 3 ) 

139 

19,476 

18,561 

915 

75,000 

75,000 

140 

25,607 

24,355 

1,252 

176,075 

156,075 

141 

121,326 

40,787 

80,539 

563,000 

330,000 

142 

24,600 

24,312 

288 

225,127 

123,678 

143 

19, 847 

19, 847 


45,000 

30,000 

144 

15,762 

14, 776 

986 

45,000 

45,000 

145 

32,190 

27,498 

4,692 

349,554 

94,010 

146 

30,438 

25,700 

4,738 

154,950 

74,950 

147 

37,513 

15,473 

22,040 

425,000 

125,000 

148 

63,605 

39,349 

24, 256 

180,000 

150,000 

149 

22,211 

22,211 


72,892 

31,079 

150 

21,558 

21,472 

86 

186,257 

75,000 

151 

20,237 

14,277 

5,960 

75,000 

75,000 

152 

27,262 

26,472 

790 

108,000 

108,000 

153 

42,616 

41,466 

1,150 

(») 

614, 778 

154 

2,300 

1,800 

500 

7,500 

7,500 

1 

5,058 

1,961 

3,097 

14,000 

14,000 

2 

1,025 

1,025 


6,000 

6,000 

3 

22,450 

21,950 

500 

53,000 

52,000 

4 

2,000 

2,000 


8,000 

8,000 

5 

0 

• 0 

0) 

(>) 

5,000 

6 

1,850 

1,850 


10,000 

10,000 

7 

9,156 

8,156 

1,000 

87,000 

75,000 

8 

2,500 

2,400 

100 

10,000 

10,000 

9 

4,430 

4,030 

400 

18,500 

17,500 

10 

5,108 

3,108 

2,000 

I 

55,000 

5,000 

11 


4 Includes 43 boarders, 


& Colored only, 


* Exclusive of donations other than cash 

































































































































































134 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table I.— INSTITUTIONS FOR THE 


Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of children received. 

Year founded. 

Colored children received. 

Number of cottages. 

Paid employees at close of year. 1 

Sisters of Mercy. 

Orphan boys. 

1899 

No. 


6 

Private corporation. 

Orphan children. 

1882 

Yes. 


11 

Masonic Grand Lodge of 

Destitute, dependent, and 

1872 

No. 

9 

42 

North Carolina. 

homeless children. 





Methodist Episcopal Church, 

Homeless and dependent 

1900 

No. 

1 

10 

South. 

orphan children. 





Baptist churches. 

Indigentorphan children.... 

1885 

No. 

10 

32 

Private organization. 

Normal orphan children. 

1903 

Yes. 

2 

4 

North Dakota Children’s 

Dependent and neglected 

1890 

Yes. 

2 

14 

Home Society. 

children. 





Presentation Sisters. 

Orphan children . 

1897 

Yes. 



County of Summit.. 

Dependent children. 

1S80 

Yes. 


12 

Counties of Stark and Co- 

Destitute and needy chil- 

1876 

Yes. 

5 

24 

lumbiana. 

dren under 16. 





County of Ashland. 

Normal children under 16... 

1907 

Yes. 

.... 

4 

Private corporation. 

Destitute and dependent 

1886 

Yes. 


6 


children. 





County of Athens. 

Destitute children. 

1880 

Yes. 


11 

County of Logan. 

Destitute children.. 

1886 

Yes. 

2 

6 

M ethod is t E p iscopal Church. 

Orphan children. 

1864 

No. 


13 

Private corporation. 

Orphan and homeless chil- 

1892 

Yes. 

2 



aren. 





County of Harrison. >. 

Normal indigent children... 

1890 

Yes. 

1 

7 

County of Guernsey. 

Destitute and dependent 

1884 

Yes. 


9 


children. 





County of Tuscarawas. 

Destitute children. 

1881 

Yes. 


10 

Private corporation (Catho- 

Homeless and friendless 

1885 

No. 


10 

lie). 

bo vs. 





Private corporation. 

Orphan, neglected, home- 

1864 

Yes. 


23 


less, and dependent chil- 






dren. 





Department of Public Safety 

Delinquent and dependent 
children from 3 to 16. 

1850 

Yes. 

.... 

57 

Private corporation. 

Orphan and destitute chil- 

1832 

No. 

.... 

21 


dren. 





Private organization. 

Protestant orphan children.. 

1849 

No. 

.... 

12 

Sisters of Mercy. 

Orphan and destitute girls.. 

1858 

No. 



United Jewish Charities. 

Temporarily homeless chil- 

1896 

No. 

.... 

8 

Private corporation. 

Orphan and abandoned 

1845 

Yes. 

0) 

0) 


children. 





Franciscan Brothers. 

Indigent homeless boys.. 

1886 

No. 



Sisters of Notre Dame. 

German Catholic orphan 

1837 

No. 


26 


children. 





Sisters of Charity. 

Girls under 6, boys under 4.. 

1873 

No. 

.... 

27 

Sisters of Charity. 

Orphan and neglected chil- 

1829 

No. 


36 


dren. 





Franciscan Brothers. 

Indigent homeless boys. 

1905 

No. 



Private corporation (Prot- 

Homeless working boys 

1900 

No. 


2 

estant). 

under 18. 






XI 

a 

a 

a 

a 

o 


12 

13 

14 


15 

16 
17 

1 

2 


5 

6 

7 

8 

9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 
21 
22 

23 

24 

25 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


NORTH CAROLINA—Continued. 


Nazareth: 

Catholic Orphanage. 

Oxford: 

Colored Orphan Asylum. 
Oxford Orphan Asylum.. 


Raleigh: 

Methodist Orphanage. 


Thomasville: 

Thomasville Baptist Orphanage. 
Winston-Salem: 

Colored Orphan Home. 

502 East Fourth St. 

NORTH DAKOTA. 

Fargo: 

North Dakota Children’s Home. 
804 Tenth St., south. 

St. John’s Orphanage. 

Seventh Ave. 


OHIO. 

Akron: 

Summit County Children’s Home.... 
264 Arlington St. 

Alliance: 

Fairmount Children’s Home. 

Box 525. 

Ashland: 

Ashland County Children’s Home. 
R.D.8. 

Ashtabula: 

Children’s Home. 

37 Main St. 

Athens: 

Athens County Children’s Home. 

Bellefontaine : 

Logan County Children’s Home. 

Sidney Pike. 

Berea: 

German Methodist Orphan Asylum.. 
193 Center St. 

Birmingham: 

Light and Hope Orphanage. 

Amhers-t P. O. 

Cadiz: 

Harrison County Children’s Home... 
Cambridge : 

Guernsey County Children’s Home... 
274 Highland Ave. 

Canal Dover: 

Tuscarawas Children’s Home. 

Tuscarawas Ave. 

Cincinnati: 

Boys’ Home of Cincinnati. 

526 Sycamore St. (Box 819). 

Children’s Home. 

Ninth Ave. and Plum St. 


Cincinnati House of Refuge. 

Box 66. 

Cincinnati Orphan Asylum. 

Wellington Place (Mount Auburn). 

German Protestant Orphans’ Home.... 
Highland Ave. (Mount Auburn). 

House of Mercy. 

1409 Freeman Ave. 

Jewish Foster Home. 

718 West Sixth St. 

New Orphan Asylum for Colored Youth 
Spillito and Emery Sts. 

Protectory for Boys. 

Station F. 

St. Aloysius’ Orphan Asylum. 

Reading Road. 

St. Joseph’s Infant Asylum. 

Tennessee Ave. (Station H). 

St. Joseph’s Orphan Asylum. 

Blue Rock and Cherry Sts. (Sta¬ 
tion A). 

St. Vincent’s Home for Boys. 

926 Bank St. 

Working Boys’ Home. 

518 West Ninth Ave. 


children received for first 
time in 1910. 


o 

Eh 


55 

36 

51 


( l ) 

34 

10 


65 

0) 

87 

111 

10 

35 

24 

19 

15 

6 

59 

11 

50 

165 
s 757 

175 

150 

17 

28 

70 

0) 

11 

81 

297 

141 

99 

45 


55 

20 

24 


( l ) 

16 

4 


38 

( l ) 

38 

64 

6 

21 

12 

6 

( l ) 


31 
5 

30 

165 

387 

121 

60 

12 

30 

0) 

11 

32 
152 

83 

99 

45 


16 

27 


(*) 

18 

6 

27 

( l ) 

49 

47 

4 

14 

12 

13 

(0 


28 

6 

20 


370 

54 

90 

5 

28 

40 

0) 


49 

145 

58 


Through— 


5 

10 


87 

111 

10 

27 


19 


9 

36 


307 

175 

50 


0) 


2 

26 

21 

19 

15 


J9« 

d 

o 2 

*£.5 


b£ 

fl 

3 

c 3 cj 

TvS 

is 

Xi 

V 


49 


0 ) 


73 


OB 

a) u 
> 


v.2 

«« 


(») 


40 

16 

51 


( l ) 

34 

10 


62 

(*) 


15 

6 

59 

2 

14 

25 

342 


100 

17 

28 

70 

0) 

11 

6 

271 

120 

80 

15 


10 

3 


(*) 


140 

59 


0) 


15 


1 Not reported. 


2 Included in report of North Dakota Children’s Home Society. 


8 Exclusive of amount covered into county treasury. 















































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


135 


CARE OF CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


CHILDREN IN THE INSTITUTION 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

AT 

CHILDREN 
OUTSIDE BUT 
UNDER 
SUPERVISION. 

CHILDREN 
PLACED IN 
FAMILIES 
DURING 
YEAR. 

CHILDREN 
DISCHARGED 
DURING YEAR. 

RECEIPTS 

DURING YEAR. 

PAYMENTS DURING 
YEAR. 

VALUE OF 
PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Total. 

a 

Female. 

Dependent. 

Working boys or girls. 

Delinquent. 

Total. 

Derived from— 


Orphans and 
foundlings. 

Invalid or defec¬ 
tive. 

All other. 

c5 

4-> 

o 

Eh 

cS 

"c3 

Female. 

o 

<x> 

Female. 

c3 

O 

Eh 

O; 

*c3 

a 

Female. 

Ap- 

pro- 

pria- 

tions. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources 

Total. 

For 

run¬ 

ning 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total 

(includ¬ 

ing 

invested 

funds). 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

55 

55 


55 





5 

5 


5 

5 





$10,000 


$$, ooo 


$2,000 

$10,000 

$9 000 

$1,000 



12 

201 

86 

115 

201 





18 

10 

8 




15 

6 

9 

6 697 

§5 000 

1 000 


697 

8 465 

8 465 

$45 000 

$45 000 

13 

314 

147 

167 

314 





330 

150 

180 

57 

32 

25 

5 

5 


32,026 

10,000 

5^877 

$49 

16,100 

33,117 

32,859 

258 

182,891 

157,118 

14 

140 

61 

79 

140 





2 

2 


1 

1 


9 

4 

5 

24,455 


24, 455 



24 455 

14 217 

10,238 

143,098 

110,000 

15 

386 

190 

196 

386 











32 

15 

17 

52,289 


30 942 


21,347 

55 119 

47 940 

7,179 

238,925 

135 915 

16 

36 

12 

24 

36 




. 




1 

1 





2,391 


2 391 


2 391 

1 291 

1,100 

10,000 

10,000 

17 

19 

12 

7 

11 

2 

6 



340 

190 

150 

42 

24 

18 

31 

8 

23 

( 2 ) 


(*) 

(*> 

( 2 ) 

« 

( 2 ) 

<*> 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 

1 

102 

47 

55 

10J 

1 










0) 

0) 

0) 



(■) 



m 

(i) 

( l ) 

(i) 

0) 

2 

63 

40 

23 



63 



65 

30 

35 

28 

0) 

( l ) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

10,280 

3 9,147 

4 1,133 


V / 

10 280 

10,120 

160 

32,000 

32,000 

1 

139 

86 

53 

63 


76 



192 

89 

103 

16 

5 

11 

46 

20 

26 

27,820 

323,696 


4 2,156 

4 1,968 

27,820 

25, 995 

1,825 

347,500 

347,500 

2 

17 

13 

4 

8 


9 



8 

2 

6 

8 

2 

6 

2 

2 


3,676 

3 3,180 



4 496 

3 676 

3 676 


16,000 

16,000 

3 

33 

24 

9 



33 



m 

( l ) 

( l ) 

21 

10 

11 

10 

7 

3 

4,309 

3 615 

170 

524 


4 609 

4 609 


15,000 

15,000 

4 

62 

46 

16 



62 



15 

7 

8 

43 

20 

23 

2 

2 


6,378 

3 5 654 


4 418 

4 306 

6 378 

5 961 

417 

15,000 

15,000 

5 

34 

17 

17 


4 

30 



6 

2 

4 

6 

2 

4 




6,496 

3 4,800 



4 1,696 

5 502 

5,127 

375 

30,000 

30,000 

6 

120 

0) 

(i) 

120 





( 4 ) 

0) 

( i ) 

( l ) 

( l ) 

( l ) 

(!) 

(!) 

( l ) 

14,296 


14,296 


14 296 

12,278 

2,018 

195,000 

150,000 

7 

9 

7 

2 

1 


8 



5 

5 

3 

2 

1 

4 

3 

1 

4,000 


350 

150 

3,500 

4 000 

3 750 

250 

45,000 

45,000 

8 

25 

13 

12 

25 





8 

5 

3 

8 

5 

3 

55 

31 

24 

7,764 

3 5,147 


4 2,617 

7,764 

m 

( l ) 

35,000 

35,000 

9 

42 

31 

11 

24 


18 



52 

19 

33 

12 

8 

4 

10 

6 

4 

7,526 

3 7,145 


4 334 

4 47 

7,526 

7,029 

497 

40,000 

40,000 

10 

103 

67 

36 

48 


55 



70 

40 

30 

23 

14 

9 

65 

39 

26 

14,571 

6,829 


336 

7, 406 

13,756 

13,756 


80,000 

80,000 

11 

70 

70 


35 



35 


2 

2 


23 

23 


140 

140 


19,875 


2,299 

1,554 

16,022 

17,386 

13,839 

3,547 

45,000 

45,000 

12 

& 147 

81 

66 

96 


51 



485 

266 

219 

92 

40 

52 

&1097 

547 

550 

27,840 


14,083 

13,757 

22,467 

21,188 

1,279 

•*50,000 

150,000 

13 

391 

(l) 

(l) 



(l) 


( i ) 

373 

0) 

(i) 

39 

14 

25 

179 

1 

I 136 

43 

78,860 

78,860 



77,574 

75,089 

2,485 

630,000 

630,000 

14 

95 

52 

43 

20 


75 


30 

15 

15 

20 

15 

5 

60 

40 

20 

19,501 

3,001 

1,335 

15,165 

20,012 

19,374 

638 

379,673 

80,000 

15 

88 

54 

34 

8S 





20 

12 

8 




21 

13 

8 

19,431 


10,197 

2,381 

6,853 

13,440 

12,267 

1,173 

317,200 

150,000 

16 

45 


45 

41 


4 









2 


2 

1,147 


100 

330 

717 

61, 147 

1,147 


10,000 

10,000 

17 

39’ 

14 

25 



39 









80 

41 

39 

5,254 


5,254 



5,254 

5,254 


7,000 

7,000 

18 

(>) 

(») 

(>) 

o) 

C 1 ) 

o) 

0) 

c i ) 

C 1 ) 

0) 

o 

(>) 

(*) 

0) 

C 1 ) 

c) 

<‘> 

0) 

C 1 ) 

( i ) 

0) 

(») 

« 

(») 

0) 

( i ) 

(*) 

19 

120 

120 


120 








8 

8 


20 

20 


2,900 


200 

1,500 

1,200 

800 

800 


150,000 

150,000 

20 

86 

34 

52 

86 





46 

21 

25 

22 

10 

12 

17 

10 

7 

46,840 


625 

1,010 

45,205 

38,449 

23,932 

14,517 

0) 

C 1 ) 

21 

358 

173 

185 

358 











0) 

(1) 

(!) 

12,351 


11,342 

1,009 

12,351 

10,192 

2,159 

50,000 

50,000 

22 

298 

189 

109 

225 


73 



1 


1 




141 

76 

65 

40,436 


2,159 

3,509 

34,768 

31,613 

25,728 

5,885 

187,100 

100,000 

23 

200 

200 


20 


140 


40 

20 

20 


20 

20 


62 

62 


( i ) 


(>) 

(*) 

( i > 

(») 

( i ) 

( i ) 

( i ) 

(*) 

24 

14 

14 





14 








100 

100 


2,423 


1,500 

923 


1,700 

1,500 

200 

10,000 

10,000 

25 





I 


















4 Covered into county treasury. $includes children in day nursery department. 6 Exclusive of heat, light, laundry, and water rent. 




























































































































































































136 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table I.— INSTITUTIONS FOR THE 









03 

children received 

FOR 

FIRST 






•d 


© 



TIME IN 1910. 








© 

y 

’© 


© 

CO 

o 





Through— 


c 

J5 





2 

i 

© 
























a 

a 

a 

a 

0 

0 

NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised or conducted by — 

Class of children received. 

T3 

© 

£ 

a 

5 

i -4 

a 

A 

© 

© 

03 

+» 

4^> 

O 

© 

o 

© 

rO 

CO 

© 

© 

t>> 

o 

p* 

a 

© 



© 

.a 

’© 

£ 

o 

.© 

© 

3 d 

t— o 
o-~ 

bjo 

.0 

| s 

ev§ 

-o'! 

°2 
CO P 
© © 
^ 3 

' CO 

08 cJ 

i 

© 

fl 

© 

u > 

c3 

t -4 

3 




t-H 

C3 

© 

>* 

£ 

o 

U 

£ 

3 

& 

c3 

Ph 

c3 

-4-3 

o 

H 

© 

a 

a 

© 

3 

a 

o £3 
ig-a 
o 

A 

O 

— 1 

a,-- 

& 

4-3 

o 


OHIO — Continued. 
















Circle ville: 















26 

Pickaway County Children’s Home.... 


Orphan and dependent chil- 

1906 

Yes. 


8 

4 

4 


4 
















R. D.3. 


dren. 





* 









Cleveland: 









0) 

C 1 ) 

C 1 ) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

27 

Children’s Industrial Home and School. 

Children’s Aid Society of 
Cleveland. 

Destitute children. 

1864 

(’) 

(0 

0) 

0) 

0) 

10427 Detroit Ave. 



64 

8 

28 


National Benevolent Asso¬ 
ciation of Christian Church. 

Orphan, neglected, and 
homeless children. 

1902 

No. 


8 

72 

34 

38 




10907 Lorain Ave. 





78 

29 


Independent Order of B’nai 
B’rith. • 

Orphan children from 5 tb 12. 

1868 

No. 


58 

78 

46 

32 





5000 Woodland Ave. 




19 

103 

64 

30 

Cleveland Protestant Orphan Asylum.. 
5000 St. Clair Ave., NE. 

Private corporation. 

Orphan, dependent, and 
neglected children. 

1852 

Yes. 


15 

206 

156 

50 

20 













50 


31 

Infants’ Rest. 

Cleveland Humane Society.. 

Abandoned, dependent, and 
neglected children under 2. 

1873 

Yes. 


10 

69 

39 

30 

11 

1 


7 

9014 Cedar Ave. 






(1) 

(l) 

0) 

0) 

32 

Jewish Infant Orphans’ Home. 

Federation of Jewish Chari- 

Indigent Jewish children 
under 5. 

1901 

No. 


9 

103 

0) 

o; 

0) 

2200 East Fortieth St. 

ties. 



0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

33 

Jones’ Home for Friendless Children... 

Private corporation. 

Orphan and neglected chil¬ 
dren. 

18S7 

No. 


9 

71 

40 

31 

(») 

3518 West Twentv-fifth St. 

St. Ann’s Infant Asylum. 

Sisters of Charity of St. Au¬ 
gustine. 

1873 

Yes. 


14 

386 

809 

34 

Foundlings and orphan chil¬ 
dren. 

834 

448 

25 




3409 Woodland Ave. 





115 

35 

St. Joseph’s Orphan Asylum . 

Ladies of the Sacred Heart of 

Orphan girls.. 

1851 

No. 


4 

135 


135 

20 




6431 Woodland Ave. 

Mary. 







101 

8 

36 

St. Vincent’s Orphan Asylum .. 

Sisters of Charity of St. Au¬ 
gustine. 

Orphan, abandoned, and 
neglected boys. 

1850 

Yes. 


15 

132 

132 


23 



3315 Monroe Ave. 








Columbus: 












67 


37 

Franklin County Children’s Home.. 

County of Franklin.. 

Orphan and homeless chil¬ 
dren. 

1880 

Yes. 


24 

67 

41 

26 











(>) 


38 

Hare Orphans’ Home. 

Private cor])oration.. 

Indigent children.. 

1860 

No. 


5 

18 

10 

8 




(*) 

2104 Tuller St. 








39 

St. Ann’s Infant Asylum. 

Sisters of St. Francis. 

Dependent children under 5. 

1908 

Yes. 


12 

100 

69 

31 

16 


7 


77 

1555 Brvden Road. 






18 


40 

St. Joseph’s Orphan Home. 

Pontifical College of Josephi- 
num. 

Destitute boys. 

1876 

No. 


4 

18 

18 






821 East Main St. 










41 

St. Vincent’s Orphan Asylum. 

Sisters of St. Francis.. 

Orphan and destitute chifc- 

1875 

Yes. 



89 

43 

46 

89 





1490 East Main St. 


dren. 








Dayton: 















42 

Children’s Home 

County of Montgomery 

Orphan and destitute chil- 

1843 

No. 


14 

64 

34 

30 

64 





528 South Summit St. 


aren. 






43 

Holloway Children’s Home. 

Private corporation.. 

Orphan and dependent chil¬ 
dren under 16. 

1903 

(*> 


4 

25 

8 

17 



10 

15 


267 Dunbar Ave. 








44 

St. Joseph’s Orphan TTomp 


Orphan children over 2 

1849 

No. 


13 

41 

24 

17 

41 





St. Paul Ave. 

Blood. 







4& 

Defiance: 















Defiance County Children’s Home. 

County of Defiance. 

Dependent children from 1 
to 16. 

1884 

Yes. 


4 

14 

7 


8 



4 

2 

Delaware : 
















46 

Children’s Home of Delaware.. 

Private corporation. 

Homeless and neglected chil¬ 
dren. 

1881 

Yes. 


6 

37 

18 

19 

37 





Sandusky St. 








Eaton: 















47 

Preble County Children’s Home. 

County of Preble. 

Dependent children.. 

1884 

Yes. 

2 

6 

6 

4 

2 

4 



2 


Findlay: 












48 

Findlay Orphan’s Home. 

Private organization 6 

Orphan and destitute chil¬ 
dren. 

1893 

Yes. 


4 

34 

25 

9 

16 

18 




West Park St. 









Flat Rock: 















49 

Ebenezer Orphan Asylum. 

Evangelical Association. 

Orphan and homeless chil¬ 
dren. 

1866 

Yes. 


21 

37 

23 

14 




4 

33 

Gallipolis: 
















50 

Gallia County Children’s Home. 

County of Gallia. 

Orphan and indigent chil¬ 
dren. 

1884 

Yes. 


8 

11 

5 

6 

4 



7 


R. D. 2. 










Georgetown: 















51 

Brown County Orphan Children’s 
Home. 

County of Brown. 

Dependent children .... 

18S5 

0 


4 

21 

9 

12 


17 


4 












Home St. 
















Glendale: 















52 

Bethany Home for Boys. 

Sisters of the Transfigura¬ 
tion (Episcopal). 

Destitute boys. 

1909 

No. 



3 

3 





3 


Grand Ave. 












53 

Bethany Home for Girls... : . 

Sisters of the Transfigura¬ 
tion (Episcopal). 

Orphan and destitute girls.. 

1898 

No. 



19 


19 




19 


Albion Ave. 









Granville: 














54 

Fannie Doane Home for Missionaries’ 

American Baptist Foreign 
Mission Society. 

Foreign missionaries’ chil¬ 
dren from 7 to 18. 

1909 

No. 

2 

5 









Children. 












Broadway. 















Greenville: 















55 

Darke County Children’s Home. 

County of Darke. 

Orphan and homeless chil¬ 
dren. 

1889 

Yes. 


11 

8 

6 

2 




8 


Hamilton: 
















56 

Children’s Home. 

Private corporation. 

Orphan, destitute, and neg¬ 
lected children. 

1S69 

Yes. 

1 

11 

73 

43 

30 

27 



46 


South D St. 






Hillsboro: 















57 

Highland County Children’s Home.... 
East Main St. 

Private corporation. 

Dependent and neglected 
children. 

1898 

No. 


5 

27 

16 

11 

27 














Ironton: 















58 

Lawrence County Children’s Home.... 
Vernon St. 

Countv of Lawrence. 

Foundlings, homeless, and 
dependent children. 

1874 

Yes. 


e 

12 

5 


9 



3 












Lancaster: 















59 

Fairfield County Children’s Home. 

County of Fairfield. 

Orphan and homeless chil¬ 
dren under 16. 

1883 

Yes. 


9 

19 

6 

13 

19 





Lebanon: 
















60 

Warren County Orphan Asylum. 

County of Warren. 

Orphan and homeless de¬ 
pendent children. 

1869 

Yes. 


8 

17 

9 

8 

17 














1 Not reported. 2 Included in report of Cleveland Humane Society. 3 Colored only. 








































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


137 


CARE OF CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


CHILDREN IN THE 
CLOSE OF 

INSTITUTION 

YEAR. 

AT 

CHILDREN 
OUTSIDE BUT 
UNDER 
SUPERVISION. 

CHILDREN 
PLACED IN 
FAMILIES 
DURING 
YEAR. 

CHILDREN 
DISCHARGED 
DURING YEAR. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Dependent. 

Working boys or girls. 

Delinquent. 

Orphans and 
foundlings. 

Invalid or defec¬ 
tive. 

All other. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

42 

26 

16 

26 


16 






23 

10 

13 

9 

1 

1 

0) 

(») 

0) 

(>) 

(») 

0) 

o) 

0) 

(>) 

(>) 

(») 

0) 

(«) 

C 1 ) 

<») 

(*) 

0) 

43 

24 

19 

27 


16 



1 


1 


5 

9 

47 

27 

20 

500 

279 

221 

500 











78 

45 

33 

78 

44 

34 

19 


59 



389 

214 

175 

97 

72 

25 

75 

56 

19 

14 

9 

5 

3 


11 



300 

125 

175 

45 

21 

24 

22 

13 

9 

56 

0) 

(i) 

0) 

0) 

O) 

0) 

C 1 ) 






95 

(i) 

(l) 

73 

46 

27 

36 

37 

10 

4 

6 




54 

34 

20 

132 

63 

69 

132 












265 


265 

245 




20 




35 


35 

77 


77 

275 

275 


1S6 


89 









138 

138 


108 

63 

45 



108 






28 

16 

12 

26 

20 

G 

39 

D) 

0) 

39 







16 

0) 

(i) 

150 

90 

60 

150 











80 

(I) 

0) 

35 

35 


35 











17 

17 

300 

146 

154 

300 











70 

34 

36 

116 

0) 

(») 

o) 


(*) 



40 

25 

15 

11 

0) 

0) 

78 

(>) 

(») 

44 

24 

20 

44 











2 

2 


0) 

( i ) 

(>) 

(») 

.... 

■ 

0) 









(») 

C 1 ) 

(») 

26 

14 

12 

13 




13 

21 

7 

14 

11 

5 

6 

1 

1 


45 

27 

18 

45 





(!) 

0) 

C 1 ) 

37 

21 

16 

(1) 

(!) 

0) 

30 

19 

11 

22 


8 


• 

26 

16 

10 

26 

16 

10 

1 

1 

38 

20 

18 

23 


15 



10 

6 

4 

20 

12 

8 




122 

68 

54 

113 


9 



4 

3 

1 

0) 

(l) 

(l) 

22 

10 

12 

21 

13 

8 

11 


10 



16 

11 

5 

2 

1 

1 

0) 

(1) 

0) 

24 

17 

7 

10 




14 

69 

31 

38 

69 

31 

38 

3 

1 

2 

19 

19 


5 


14 












85 

85 

82 

3 










20 


20 

17 

8 

9 


17 












54 

34 

20 

24 

8 

21 


1 

6S 

33 

35 

12 

6 

6 

5 

5 


80 

43 

37 

39 

5 

36 



9 

4 

5 

16 

5 

11 

82 

51 

31 

36 

20 

16 

12 


22 

.... 

2 

35 

20 

15 

8 

5 

3 

9 

6 

3 

65 

39 

26 

6 


59 



27 

13 

14 

19 

6 

13 

3 

3 


58 

29 

29 

31 

1 

26 



26 

15 

11 

4 

2 

2 

11 

5 

6 

26 

16 

10 

26 





19 

13 

6 

7 

5 

2 

1 

.... 

1 


4 Exclusive of amount covered into county treasury. 


RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 


Total. 


SO, 200) 
0) 


7,641 


110,523 


31,968 


2 3,929 

0) 

8,965 

10,111 

17,356 

21,000 

13,221 
3,894 
0) 

C 1 )' 


24,288 


20,065 


694 


Derived from— 


Ap- 

pro- 

pria- 

tions. 


0 ) 


2,491 


5,294 


8,613 


3, 721 


20,000 


3,489 


3,718 

5,179 

10,900 

6,700 

11,392 

9,696 

3,560 

5,463 


10,283 

I 

9,554 


So, 801 

0) 


0) 


0) 

12,854 


20,065 

429 


4 2,310 


300 


4 8.378 


3,069 


4 3,363 


4 2,806 


Dona¬ 

tions. 


Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 


0) 

S3,544 


80,236 


808 

0) 

2,264 

2,000 

14,739 

C 1 ) 


872 

0) 

0) 

17,590 


250 

0) 


51 

10,000 


4 11,293 
9,539 
3,260 
5,463 


Other 

sources 


$361 

0) 

2,780 


986 


0) 


3,017 


1,239 


2,617 


0) 


0) 

< l ) 

6,698 


15 

0 ) 

5 153 

4,751 

5 216 
599 

2,000 


$44 

0) 

1,317 

30,287 

30,982 

3,121 

( x ) 

3,684 

6,872 


0 ) 

367 

3,022 

0) 

C 1 ) 


0) 

6 28 

243 

5 19 
2 

8,000 

&126 

5912 


2,157 

3,326 

2,175 


96 

300 


4 10,060 .... 

7,204 .... 

5 Covered into county treasury. 


267 


4,525 


5 99 


5115 


7,574 


61 


PAYMENTS DURING 
YEAR. 

VALUE OF 
PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Total. 

For 

run¬ 

ning 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total 

(includ¬ 

ing 

invested 

funds). 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

$6,111 

$6,111 


0) 

( i ) 

26 

(») 

0) 

(*) 

0) 

0) 

27 

7,898 

7,898 


$25,000 

$25,000 

28 

93,413 

88,124 

$5,289 

836,833 

356,687 

29 

26,141 

23,436 

2,705 

625,500 

305,500 

30 

2 3,929 

3,793 

136 

( 2 ) 

(*> 

31 

(*) 

(») 

(«) 

(>) 

« 

32 

9 621 

7,299 

2,322 



33 

14,894 

14,394 

500 

19,000 

19,000 

34 

16,700 

16,700 


50,000 

50,000 

35 

21,000 

0) 

« 

( i ) 

60,000 

36 

16,237 

13,221 

3,016 

125,000 

125,000 

37 

3,846 

3,846 


27,500 

8,000 

38 

(*) 

(») 

(») 

<‘> 

(>) 

39 

<*) 

C 1 ) 

G) 



40 

24,288 

18,444 

5,844 

100,000 

100,000 

41 

20,065 

17,409 

2,656 

50,000 

50,000 

4£ 

694 

694 




43 

0) 

0) 

« 

(!) 

0) 

44 

3,611 

3,430 

181 

8,000 

8,000 

45 

4,707 

4,407 

300 

3,000 

2,500 

46 

6,764 

6,343 

421 

65,000 

60,000 

47 

3,616 

3,616 


6,000 

6,000 

48 

18,000 

15,000 

3,000 

160,000 

60,000 

49 

3,489 

3,489 


21,000 

21,000 

50 

3,718 

3,333 

385 

20,000 

20,000 

51 

4,465 

1,900 

2,565 

12,500 

7,500 

52 

10,900 

8,900 

2,000 

5,000 


53 

6,700 

6,700 


20,000 

20,000 

54 

11,392 

9,821 

1,571 

50,000 

50,000 

55 

8,723 

8,723 


45,000 

45,000 

56 

3,200 

3,000 

200 

12,000 

12,000 

57 

5,463 

5,284 

179 

20,000 

20,000 

58 

10,283 

9,135 

1,148 

52,300 

52,300 

59 

9,554 

7,302 

2,252 

72,000 

25,000 

60 


6 Semi-county home. 





































































































































































































































138 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table I.— INSTITUTIONS FOR THE 


u 

3 

a 

3 

a 

a 


3 



61 

62 

63 

64 

65 

66 

67 

68 

69 


70 

71 

72 

73 

74 

75 

76 

77 

78 

79 

80 

81 

82 

83 

84 

85 

86 

87 

88 

89 

90 

91 

92 









CHILDREN received 

FOR 

FIRST 







© 

>> 



TIME in 1910. 






09 

y 

*3 

_ 

i 

© 

C/3 

o 




Through— 

NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of children received. 


a 

© 

tt) 

C3 

"c3 

3 





© 

tM 

S-H 

© r~i 

C/3 

• 



'd 

© 

'd 

3 

2 

1 

TJ 

© 

O 

o 

© 

u 

a> 

ft 

© 

ft 

ft 

S 

© 



© 

# 03 

Q 

6 

O 

o 

+* c 

1 c 
= 73 

72 3 

C3 

1.8 
ft « 

® © 
K* Vh 
•P i © 

(A 

c3 'd 

O 

§ 

tuO 

C3 

(-> 




u 

c3 

u 

o 

3 

p 

2 

c3 

© 

S 

© 

ft 

a 

gl 

ft w 
ft 

—< c 
©.£ 

■3 





o 


p-i 


s 

ft 

P4 

o 

o 

£ 

o 

OHIO—Continued. 















Lima: 















Allen County Children’s Home 

County of Allen 

Indigent children.. 

1893 

Yes. 

3 

12 

28 

12 

16 

28 





Box 498.” 










London: 










12 







Orphan and indigent chil¬ 
dren. 

1898 

Yes. 

2 

9 

12 

4 

8 





R. D. 7. 








Louisville: 
















Sisters of Charity of St. 
Augustine. 

Orphan and abandoned boys. 

1883 

Yes. 


1 

64 

64 


20 




44 








McArthur: 

















Homeless and indigent chil¬ 
dren. 

1885 

Yes. 


6 

15 

7 

8 

15 














Malta: 

















Orphan and indigent chil¬ 
dren. 

1880 

Yes. 


4 

7 

4 

3 

7 
















Mansfield: 

















Indigent children 

1880 

Yes. 


9 

30 

12 

18 

30 





259 Hedges St. 








Marietta: 













3 


Washington County Children's Home.. 
Marion: 


Indigent children under 16.. 

1866 

Yes. 

3 

11 

23 

13 

10 

20 








11 


Marion County Children’s Home 

County of Marion.. 

Orphan and indigent chil¬ 
dren. 

1900 

Yes. 


8 

29 

14 

15 

18 












Marysville: 

















Orphan and dependent chil¬ 
dren. 

1884 

Yes. 


6 

17 

7 

10 

17 





R. D. 3. 








Massillon: 















Charity Rotch School* 

Private corporation.. 

Indigent children.. 

1826 

Yes. 











Maumee: ' 











28 


Lucas Countv Children’s Home 

Countv of Lucas.. 

Dependent children 

1888 

Yes. 

5 

‘ 28 

87 

53 

34 

59 




Millersburg: 








Painter Children’s Home.. 

County of Holmes 

Orphan, neglected, and de¬ 
pendent children. 

1888 

No. 


6 

2 

1 

1 




2 













Minster: 












10 


St. Mary’s Institute. 

Sisters of the Precious Blood. 

Orphan girls. 

1888 

No. 



10 


10 





Mount Ephraim: 










Children’s Temporary Home 

County ol Noble.. 

Dependent children 

1898 

No. 


1 

6 

3 

3 

6 





New Lexington: 












Perry Countv Children’s Home 

County of Perry. 

Orphan and homeless chil¬ 
dren. 

1885 

Yes. 


4 

13 

10 

3 

8 



5 


Mill St. " 









Norwalk: 















Norwalk Children’s Home 

Private organization 

Orphan and indigent chil¬ 
dren. 

1882 

Yes. 


2 

13 

4 

9 

13 





143 Benedict St. 









Oberlin: 















Lorain County Children’s Home.. 

County of Lorain.. 

Destitute and dependent 
children. 

1899 

Yes. 

2 

9 

43 

28 

15 

43 





538 East College St. 







Pomeroy: 















Meigs County Children’s Home.. 

County of Meigs. 

Orphan and abandoned chil¬ 
dren under 16. 

1880 

Yes. 


7 

15 

9 

6 

15 














Portsmouth: 















Scioto County Children’s Home. 

County of Scioto. 

Dependent children. 

1877 

Yes. 


8 

22 

13 

9 

2 



20 


Sandusky: 









Erie County Children’s Home. 

County of Erie. 

Orphan and indigent chil¬ 
dren. 

1901 

Yes. 


5 

27 

8 

19 

19 



8 


Sycamore Line. 









Sidney: 















Shelby County Children’s Home. 

County of Shelby. 

Dependent children. 

1896 

Yes. 

2 

8 

12 

5 





5 


R". D. 3. 











Smithfield: 















Children’s Bethel. 

Private corporation. 

Neglected and destitute chil¬ 
dren. 

1905 

No. 

3 

6 

23 

12 

11 

3 



20 










South Euclid: 















Rainbow Cottage. 

Private corporation. 

Needy, convalescent, and 
crippled children. 

1891 

Yes. 

«1 

20 

140 

68 

72 


140 




Green Road. 






Springfield: 














Clark County Children’s Home. 

County of Clark. 

Orphan and dependent chil¬ 
dren. 

1878 

Yes. 

1 

7 

21 

11 

10 

13 



8 


Home Road. 






Oesterlen Orphans’ Home. 

Private corporation (Luth¬ 
eran). 

Orphan children from 4 to 10. 

1904 

No. 

2 

5 

3 

3 





1 

2 

R. D. 10.” 










Ohio Pythian Home. 

Knights of Pythias of Ohio.. 

Knights of Pythias’ orphan 
children. 

1894 

No. 

5 

24 

35 

12 

23 




35 








Tacoma: 















Belmont County Children’s Home.... 

County of Belmont.. 

Orphan, neglected, and de¬ 
pendent children. 

1881 

Yes. 


10 

34 

16 

18 

34 












Tiffin: 















National Orphans’ Home. 

Junior Order United Ameri- 

Orphan children of members 
of the order. 

1896 

No. 


32 

57 

37 

20 




57 


River Road. 

can Mechanics of Ohio. 






Toledo: 















Lucas County Juvenile Detention Home. 

County of Lucas. 

Delinquent and dependent 

1907 

Yes. 


2 

578 

469 

109 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 




418 Erie St. 


children pending action of 
court. 













St. Anthony’s Orphanage. 

Sisters of Charity (Gray 
Nuns). 

Orphan and abandoned chil¬ 
dren. 

1854 

No. 


15 

110 

54 

56 

40 



70 


2327 Cherry St. 

Toledo Boys’ Home. 





Private corporation. 

Working boys. 

1891 

Yes. 


5 

181 

181 






181 

737 Ontario St. 










Troy: 















Knoop Children’s Home. 

County of Miami. 

Orphan, neglected, and de¬ 
linquent children. 

1878 

Yes. 

1 

16 

27 

9 

18 

18 

3 


6 


R*. D. 6. 





Exclusive of amount covered into county treasury. 8 Covered into county treasury. 8 Not reported. * Temporarily closed. 













































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


139 


CARE OF CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


CHILDREN IN THE INSTITUTION 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

AT 

CHILDREN 
OUTSIDE BUT 
UNDER 
SUPERVISION. 

CHILDREN 
PLACED IN 
FAMILIES 
DURING 
YEAR. 

CHILDREN 
DISCHARGED 
DURING YEAR. 

RECEIPTS 

DURING YEAR. 

PAYMENTS DURING 
YEAR. 

VALUE OF 
PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Total. 

<6 

a 

Female. 

Dependent. 

Working boys or girls. 

Delinquent. 

Total. 


Derived from— 


Orphans and 
foundlings. 

Invalid or defec¬ 
tive. 

All other. 

”c3 

O 

O) 

7s 

a 

Female. 

*03 

-i-3 

O 

b* 

<£ 

a 

Female. 

73 

o 

oi 

73 

a 

Female. 

Ap- 
pro- 
p na¬ 
tions. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources 

Total. 

For 

run¬ 

ning 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total 

(includ¬ 

ing 

invested 

funds). 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

73 

41 

32 

26 

2 

45 



199 

76 

123 

34 

15 

19 

3 

1 

2 

$12 150 

i$7 728 


2$4,028 

2 $394 

$12 150 

811 437 

8713 

8150 000 

8i 5n non 

61 

28 

14 

14 

24 


4 



22 

9 

13 

34 

19 

15 

3 

1 

2 

4,965 

4,965 


4,965 

4,123 

842 

41 000 

41 000 

62 

125 

125 


37 


88 






67 

67 


( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


9 912 

$8,524 

1,388 


10 106 

8 662 

1 444 

et\ 



22 

12 

10 



22 



13 

6 

7 

18 

7 

11 

11 

4 

7 

2,326 

1 2,188 

2 138 

2 326 

2 326 


\ J 

6 000 

v. ) 

6 000 

oo 

64 

10 

5 

5 

10 





22 

13 

9 

10 

9 

1 




2,409 

2,409 



2,363 

2,330 

33 

12,000 

12 000 

65 

17 

16 

1 

17 





61 

32 

29 

7 

2 

5 

22 

10 

12 

5 800 

1 4 733 


2 927 

2 140 

5 800 

5 800 

60 000 

60 000 

66 

51 

28 

23 

38 


13 



89 

42 

47 

11 

4 

7 

17 

13 

4 

8,828 

1 8,572 


2 48 

2 208 

8 828 

8 341 

487 

45 000 

45 000 

67 

37 

25 

12 

32 


5 



32 

11 

21 

21 

11 

10 

7 

4 

3 

10,778 

i 9,276 


2 1,502 

9,726 

6,000 

3,726 

90,000 

90,000 

68 

22 

9 

13 

22 





78 

35 

43 

23 

5 

18 

6 

2 

4 

3 636 

i 2,771 


2 14 

2851 

16 813 

2 513 

14 300 

36 000 

36 000 

6Q 


















5 2 008 


5 2 008 

20 9 

62 

140 

59 855 

25 000 

70 

87 

53 

34 

34 


44 


9 

187 

100 

87 

187 

100 

87 

83 

54 

29 

32,714 

1 29,508 


2 3,100 

2 106 

32,714 

32, 714 

200,000 

200,000 

71 

2 

1 

1 



2 



( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 > 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


2 910 

1,711 


1 199 

m 

(3) 

( 3 ) 

13.000 

13.000 

72 

30 


30 

30 





10 

10 

1,400 



1,400 


v. / 

1,800 

1,800 

8,000 

8,000 

73 

12 

3 

9 

12 














1,000 

1,000 



1,000 

1,000 


( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

74 

8 

7 

1 

8 





6 

3 

3 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

10 

6 

4 

2,653 

1 2,342 


2 253 

2 58 

2,653 

2,653 


10,000 

10,000 

75 

18 

8 

10 

4 


14 



2 

1 

1 

2 

1 

1 

7 

4 

3 

2,707 

2,374 

283 

50 

2,158 

2,158 


12,000 

6,000 

76 

44 

24 

20 



44 



50 

23 

27 

18 

11 

7 

29 

15 

14 

7,708 

1 6,593 


2 1,102 

2 13 

7, 708 

7,708 


50,000 

50,000 

77 

35 

24 

11 

27 

1 

7 



26 

15 

11 

26 

15 

11 

7 

5 

2 

4,300 

i 4,094 


2 206 

4,300 

4,190 

110 

18,000 

18,000 

78 

33 

19 

14 



33 






15 

11 

4 




5,466 

1 5,428 



2 38 

4,175 

4,175 


50,000 

50,000 

79 

34 

12 

22 

12 


22 



21 

7 

14 

21 

7 

14 




9,004 

1 8,684 


2 320 


7,704 

7,478 

226 

22,500 

22,500 

80 

12 

6 

6 

5 


7 



12 

8 

4 

9 

5 

4 

2 


2 

6,585 

i 6,143 



2 442 

6,585 

6,585 


80,000 

80,000 

81 

33 

21 

12 

10 


20 


3 

7 

4 

3 

13 

10 

3 




3,300 

1,800 

1,500 


3,300 

1,800 

1,500 

10,000 

10,000 

82 

161 

80 

81 


161 




( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 




147 

73 

74 

15,253 


12,637 

182 

2,434 

16,145 

15,625 

520 

80,980 

34.544 

83 

42 

22 

20 

3S 

4 




27 

13 

14 

1 

1 


4 

2 

2 

9,182 

9,182 


9,569 

9,182 

387 

20,000 

to 

© 

o 

o 

o 

84 

22 

17 

5 

22 











4 


4 

10,800 

10,000 


800 

14,300 

4,300 

10,000 

43,000 

30,000 

85 

203 

97 

106 

203 











56 

33 

23 

42,129 


42,129 



39,085 

33,674 

5,411 

325,000 

325,000 

86 

41 

20 

21 

2 

7 

25 

.... 

7 

87 

48 

39 

14 

9 

5 

36 

20 

16 

7,975 

i 6,403 

• 

2 415 

7 1,157 

8,463 

7,359 

1,104 

60,000 

60,000 

87 

298 

174 

124 

298 











29 

20 

9 

45,000 


45,000 



45,000 

39,000 

6,000 

200,000 

200,000 

88 

(3) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 



(?) 









( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 



( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

89 

255 

131 

124 

255 



18 

6 

12 

• 

18 

6 

12 

119 

68 

51 

29,050 

23,513 

5,537 


28,126 

20,238 

7,888 

195,100 

190,000 

90 

(3) 

(3) 





( 3 ) 











3,151 


1,471 

1,680 

3,151 

3,151 


13,000 

7,000 

91 

33 

14 

19 

11 

.... 

21 


1 

85 

49 

36 

26 

15 

11 

12 

4 

8 

11,725 

110,955 



2 770 

11,725 

11,111 

614 

60,000 

60,000 

92 


s From rental and invested funds. 6 Additional buildings and tents used in summer. 7 Includes $132.68 covered into county treasury. 






















































































































































































































140 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table I.— INSTITUTIONS FOR THE 









u 

03 

children received 

FOR 

FIRST 








<X> 



TIME IN 

1910. 








'G 


O 














© 

y 

’© 


© 

CO 

o 





Through— 







1 

£ 

© 









& 

a 

3 

g 

NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of children received. 

© 

*G 

G 

a; 

H 

2 

05 

O 

© 

<«— 

03 

ro 

© 

© 

o 

• 



£ 

© 

© 

o-2 

bfi 

fl 

S SR 

°-d 

i 

© 

G 

G 

o 

*43 

G 




G 

2 

o 

>G 

© 

o 

© 

'ft 

s 

© 



© 

o 

o 

J2-5 

,2'U 

ft Q, 

'g’P 

— o 

CO 

ci'O 

© 

bfl 

a 

Ih 

1 

rH 




u* 

a 

© 

h 

o 

3 

O 

S 

z 

2 

ft 

2 

© 

ft 

© 

"a 

s 

£ 

© 

ft 

3 

G 

ft 

o 2 

c-S 

o 

rG co 
A 

O 

— c 

a, .2 

© 

6 

o 


OHIO—Continued. 
















Urban a: 



1891 

Yes. 




22 






29 

93 

Champaign County Children's Home... 


Dependent and delinquent 
children. 

3 

9 

29 














Warren: 



18S9 

Yes. 




2S 


28 





94 

Trumbull County Children’s Home.... 
East Market St. 


Orphan and homeless chil¬ 
dren. 


9 

30 

2 



2 












Washington Court House: 



1885 

Yes. 






12 





95 



Homeless and indigent chil¬ 
dren. 

2 

6 

12 

4 

8 





Waverly: 





6 





13 



1887 

Yes. 


96 






15 

9 

2 




West Liberty: 



No. 



52 

33 


85 




97 



Dependent, homeless chil¬ 
dren under 12. 

1896 



85 





West Park: 


( 3 ) 


11 

9 




20 





No. 

20 

98 



Orphan and homeless chil¬ 
dren. 

1895 

4 





Puritas Springs Road. 











West Union: 




Yes. 


6 


10 

7 

17 





99 



Orphan and homeless chil¬ 
dren. 

1884 


17 





Wilmington: 



10 

ii 

21 








Yes. 


21 

100 




1884 


4 





Woodsfield: 



Yes. 





9 





101 



Normal, indigent, children 
under 16. 

1888 


2 

9 

5 

4 





Wooster: 





13 

8 

21 









102 




1881 

Yes. 


10 

21 





Xenia: 






6 





103 



Homeless and indigent chil¬ 
dren. 

1883 

Yes. 


7 

6 

3 

3 





Dayton Pike. 





52 

41 




91 


104 

Ohio Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Orphans’ 
Home. 


Soldiers’ and sailors’ orphan 
children and others need- 

1870 

Yes. 

32 

165 

93 

2 














ing education. 







Youngstown: 







10 

6 





9 

105 




1900 

Yes. 

2 

7 

16 

5 



2 

Glenwood ave. 


dren. 











Zanesville: 









4 




8 


106 

John MuTntirft Children’s Home 


Orphan and destitute chil¬ 
dren under 3. 

1880 

No. 


14 

10 

6 

2 




OKLAHOMA. 

















Bacone: 









6 






1 

Morrow Indian Orphans’ Home 

American Baptist Home 
Missionary Society. 


1902 

No. 


5 

8 

2 


6 


2 


Guthrie: 
















2 




1900 













Oklahoma City: 

Society. 

pendent children under 15. 










14 



3 

Baptist Orphans’ Home 

Missionary Baptist Church.. 

Part Indian and white or¬ 
phan children. 

1903 

No. 


5 

15 

10 

5 

1 








10 


1 



14 


4 

Oklahoma Orphanage .. 


Orphan and indigent chil¬ 
dren. 

1898 

No. 

3 

4 

15 

5 





R. D. 4, Box 167. 









64 


5 

Sunbeam Orphans’ Home 


Needy and helpless children. 

1910 

No. 


2 

64 

17 

47 






431 East Eighth St. 












OREGON. 
















Beaverton: 













27 


1 

St. Mary’s Home. 

Sisters of St. Mary_ 

Orphan, homeless, and neg¬ 
lected boys. 

1891 

No. 



47 

47 


20 




Oswego: 









36 






2 

St. Mary’s Home for Girls_ 

Sisters of the Holy Names... 

Foundlings and orphan girls. 

1908 

No. 


9 

45 


45 

7 

2 




Parkplace”: 





( 3 ) 

( 3 > 

( 3 ) 


3 

St. Agnes’ Foundling Asylum. 

Sisters of Mercy.. 

Indigent children under 5... 

1901 

Yes. 



( 3 ) 


( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


Portland: 






( 3 ) 

4 

Baby Home. 

Private corporation __ 

Homeless children under 3.. 

1888 

Yes. 


12 

106 

55 

51 




( 3 ) 

East Thirty-sixth and Ellsworth 
Sts. 
















5 

Boys’ and Girls’ Aid Society Home.... 

Boys’ and Girls’ Aid So- 

Dependent and neglected 

1885 

Yes. 


9 

160 

90 

70 

69 

73 


18 

.... 


East Twenty-ninth and Irving Sts. 

ciety. 

children. 














(Station C). 












52 


6 

Children’s Home. 

Ladies’ Relief Social y. 

Orphan and other needy 
children. 

1.867 

Yes. 


8 

56 

30 

26 

4 





Corbett and Gaines Sts. 








PENNSYLVANIA. 
















Chambersburg: 















1 

Children’s Home. 

Children’s Aid Society of 
Franklin County. 

Homeless, indigent, and neg¬ 
lected children. 

1884 

Yes. 

1 

4 

18 

13 

5 


18 













Cheltenham: 














2 

Industrial Home for Jewish Girls. 

Council of Jewish Women... 

Dependent girls. 

1904 

No. 

( 3 ) 

4 

6 


6 

1 


3 


2 

Jenkintown Road and Chelten Ave. 












Chester Springs: 















3 

Soldiers’ Orphan School. 

State of Pennsylvania . 

Soldiers’ orphan children.... 

1864 

Yes. 


36 

77 

38 

39 




77 



Cornwells: 







4 

Holy Providence House. 

Sisters of the Biassed Sacra- 

Indigent and neglected chil¬ 
dren. 

1891 

( 6 ) 



41 

11 

30 




41 



Maud P. O. 

ment. 








Easton: 















5 

East on Home for Friendless Children.. 

Private corporation. 

Orphan children from 2 to 10. 

1885 

Yes. 


7 

59 

28 

31 

23 



36 



1440 Washington St. 








1 Exclusive of amount covered into county treasury. 2 Covered into county treasury. 8 Not reported. 


































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


141 


CARE OF CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


CHILDREN IN THE 
CLOSE OF 

INSTITUTION 

YEAR. 

AT 

CHILDREN 
OUTSIDE BUT 
UNDER 
SUPERVISION. 

CHILDREN 
PLACED IN 
FAMILIES 
DURING 
YEAR. 

CHILDREN 
DISCHARGED 
DURING YEAR. 

RECEIPTS 

DURING YEAR 


PAYMENTS DURING 
YEAR. 

VALUE OF 
PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

3 

o 

e 

<x> 

'eS 

a 

to 

a 

<13 

Ph 

Dependent. 

a 

w> 

t-4 

o 

CO 

.8 

to 

i 

u* 

o 

£ 

-*-> 

G 

03 

3 

O* 

a 

Q 

Total. 


Derived from— 


'd 
fl . 

CO .Q 

£vS 

o 

1 

03 

S— < Qj 

a * 

03 

►> 

5 

<5 

3 

O 

< 

o3 

o 

Eh 

03 

a 

03 

to 

1 

Ph 

TO 

o 

03* 

13 

a 

03 

TO 

a 

03 

*TO 

o 

e 

03 

13 

a 

03 

13 

a 

03 

Ph 

Ap- 
pro- 
p na¬ 
tions. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources 

Total. 

For 

run¬ 

ning 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total 

(includ¬ 

ing 

invested 

funds). 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

63 

41 

22 

57 




6 

37 

25 

12 

37 

25 

12 

5 

2 

3 

$10 922 

i $7 906 


2$2,188 

2 $828 

$12 290 

$10 922 

$1,368 

$45 000 

$45 000 

93 

19 

11 

8 

2 


17 



6 

4 

2 




9 

3 

6 

3,690 

3,690 


3,690 

3,690 

40,000 

40,000 

94 

24 

12 

12 

10 


14 



6 

3 

3 

5 

2 

3 

17 

7 

10 

5,547 

1 2,557 


2 154 

2 2,836 

6,559 

5,547 

1,012 

79,000 

79,000 

95 

22 

11 

11 

22 





13 

6 

7 

8 

4 

4 




1,500 

1,500 



1,600 

1,600 

10,000 

10,000 

96 

70 

49 

21 

42 


28 






64 

35 

29 

64 

35 

29 

2,340 

$107 

2,233 


2,099 

2,099 


20,000 

20,000 

97 

44 

22 

22 

14 


30 



2 

2 





28 

11 

17 

6,613 


2,500 

1,362 

2,751 

6,645 

4,556 

2,089 

2,500 

2,500 

98 

24 

11 

13 

20 


4 



21 

10 

11 

12 

8 

4 




4,771 

3,226 

1,545 

4,771 

4,481 

290 

95,000 

60,000 

99 

29 

19 

10 



29 



( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

34 

20 

14 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

3,413 

2,476 



937 

3,413 

3,413 


40,000 

40,000 

100 

8 

5 

3 

6 


2 



60 

40 

20 

1 

1 


1 

1 

600 

600 




710 

600 

110 

20,000 

20,000 

101 

38 

28 

10 

38 





23 

15 

s 

2 


2 




6,649 

6,649 




6,649 

6,060 

589 

50,000 

50,000 

102 

50 

33 

17 



50 









15 

3 

12 

6,000 

6,000 




6,000 

6,000 


( 3 ) 

( 3 > 

103 

634 

329 

305 

473 


161 



25 

16 

9 

4 

1 

3 

128 

68 

60 

224,000 

1 221,689 



2 2,311 

244,746 

212,931 

31,815 

500,000 

500,000 

104 

13 

9 

4 

9 


4 






9 

4 

5 

1 


1 

9,716 

9,716 



9,716 

9,309 

407 

70,000 

70,000 

105 

39 

20 

19 

29 


10 



22 

14 

8 

8 

4 

4 

4 

3 

1 

12,423 



12,423 

10,306 

9,8 S 8 

418 

326,000 

80,000 

106 

40 

20 

20 

40 











12 

9 

3 

4,589 


817 

2,889 

883 

6,589 

4,589 

2,000 

(») 

( 3 ) 

1 

2 

15 

10 

5 

15 








10 

5 

5 

10 

5 

5 

11,000 


11,000 



10,000 

8,000 

2,000 

50,000 

50,000 

3 

15 

10 

5 

14 




1 







4 


4 

1,000 


300 

200 

500 

1,000 

1,000 

44,750 

40,000 

4 

25 

10 

15 

25 











30 

14 

16 

3,642 


3,642 



3,582 

3,582 


5 

104 

104 


104 








2 

2 


21 

21 


5,537 

1,786 

1,250 


2,501 

7,093 

6,093 

1,000 

16,171 

16,171 

1 

145 


145 

114 


31 



121 


121 

( 3 ) 


( 3 ) 

17 


17 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

2 

80 


80 

60 


20 







( 3 ) 


( 3 ) 

2,600 

2,000 

300 

300 


2,600 

2,600 

30,000 

30,000 

3 

106 

55 

51 


1 

105 










13,799 

3,000 

9,364 

1,105 

330 

13,799 

9,163 

4,636 

45,500 

40,000 

4 

58 

31 

27 



58 



548 

238 

310 

395 

130 

265 




( 5 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 5 ) 

( 5 ) 

( 5 ) 

( 5 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 5 ) 

5 

70 

45 

25 

68 

2 




33 

21 

12 

10 

7 

3 

74 

36 

38 

14,575 

14,575 

6,795 

6,795 

283,920 

46,500 

6 

10 

6 

4 

6 

1 

3 



25 

10 

15 

16 

8 

8 

16 

10 

6 

2,099 

1,410 

589 


100 

1,592 

1,558 

34 

12,676 

9,876 

1 

17 

17 



9 


8 

9 


9 




3 


3 

2,126 

375 

251 

1,500 

6,985 

4,800 

2,185 

23,500 

15,000 

2 

324 

193 

131 

324 











154 

87 

67 

58,182 

58,182 




58,182 

53,424 

4,758 



3 

151 

47 

104 


151 









28 

8 

20 

( 3 ) 


( 8 ) 


( 3 ) 

17,190 

17,190 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

4 

29 

15 

14 

29 


.... 


6 

5 

1 

.... 



1 

.... 

1 

7,707 

4,443 

252 

2,208 

804 

7,367 

7,367 


34,733 

26,200 

5 


4 Included in report of Oklahoma Children's Home Society. 6 Included in report of Boys' and Girls’ Aid Society of Oregon. 6 Colored and Indian only. 




























































































































































































142 BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table I.— INSTITUTIONS FOR THE 


& 

a 

3 

fl 

fl 

■*-> 

3 

*-3 

CO 

d 


6 

7 

8 

9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

IS 

19 

20 

21 

22 

23 

24 

25 

26 

27 

28 

29 

30 

31 

32 

33 

34 

35 

36 

37 

38 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


PENNSYLVANIA—Continued. 
Eddington: 

St. John Orphan Asylum. 

Emsworth: 

Orphan Asylum of the Holy Family.. 
Erie: 

St. Joseph’s Orphan Asylum. 

Third St. 

Greenville: 

St. Paul’s Orphans’ Home. 

Grove City: 

George Junior Republic. 

R. D. 

Harrisburg: 

Children’s Industrial Home.. 

Nineteenth and Swatara Sts. 

Messiah Orphanage. 

1185 Bailey St. 

Sylvan Heights Home for Orphan Girls 
Derry St. 

Jonestown: 

Church Home and Orphanage. 

Lancaster: 

Children’s Home. 

South Ann and Chester Sts. 
Langhorne: 

Foulke and Long Institute for Orphan 
Girls. 

Eden P. O. 

Loysville: 

Tressler Orphans’ Home. 

Mars: 

St. John’s Lutheran Orphanage. 

Marwood: 

Lutheran Concordia Home.. 

Meadowbrook : 

Seybert Institution. 

419 South Fifteenth St., Philadel¬ 
phia (office). 

Meadvillf.: 

Odd Fellows’ Home. 

408 North Main St. 

Middletown: 

Emaus Orphan House. 

New Derry: 

Seraphic Home. 

North Springfield: 

Elmwood Home. 

Oakdale: 

Boys’ Industrial Home. 

Philadelphia: 

Baptist Orphanage. 

Fifty-eighth St. and Thomas Ave. 
Bethasda Children’s Christian Home... 
Willow-Grove and Stenton Aves. 

Burd Orphan Asylum.. 

Sixty-third and Market Sts. 
Catholic Home for Destitute Children.. 
1720 Race St. 

Church Home for Children. 

Baltimore Ave. and Fifty-eighth St 

Foster Home. 

Twenty-fourth and Poplar Sts. 

Friends’ Home for Children. 

4011 Aspen St. 

Girard College. 

Girard and Corinthian Aves. 

Haddock Memorial. 

806 Pine St. 

Hebrew Orphans’ Home.. 

Twelfth and Greene Lane Sts. (Lo¬ 
gan Station). 

Hebrew Sheltering Home and Day 
Nursery. 

510 North Fourth St. 

Home for Destitute Colored Children... 

Fifty-fourth and Berks Sts. 

Home for Orphans of Odd Fellows of 
Pennsylvania. 

Twentieth and Ontario Sts. 


Supervised or conducted by— 


Class of children received. 


Christian Brothers. 

Sisters of the Holy Family 
of Nazareth. 

Sisters of St. Joseph. 

Reformed Church in the 
United States. 

George Junior Republic As¬ 
sociation of Westem Penn¬ 
sylvania. 

Private corporation. 

Brethren in Christ. 

Sisters of Mercy. 

Private corporation (Episco¬ 
pal). 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 


General Synod of the Luth¬ 
eran Church. 

Joint Synod of Ohio and 
Other States. 

Synodical Conference. 

Private organization. 

Independent Order of Odd 
Fellows of Pennsylvania. 

Private corporation. 

Seraphic Work of Charity... 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation( Baptist) 

Private corporation. 

St. Stephen’s Church (Epis¬ 
copal). 

Sisters of St. Joseph. 

Private corporation (Epis¬ 
copal). 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private organization. 

Trustees of Mrs. Daniel 
Haddock Endowment. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Independent Order of Odd 
Fellows of Pennsylvania. 


Orphan boys. 


Orphan children over 18 
months old. 

Destitute and indigent chil¬ 
dren. 

Normal orphan children. 


Delinquent and wayward 
children. 


Orphan and homeless chil¬ 
dren. 

Orphan and destitute chil¬ 
dren. 

Orphan and indigent girls... 


Orphan and homeless chil- 


Jrphar 

dren. 


Orphan and neglected chil¬ 
dren from 3 to 12. 

Orphan girls. 


Destitute orphan children.. 
Orphan and deserted chil- 


Jrpnan 

dren. 


Orphan and destitute chil¬ 
dren. 

Dependent children. 


Odd Fellows’ orphan chil¬ 
dren from 3 to 12. 

Orphan children from 6 to 12 

Indigent and destitute boys 

Incorrigible boys under 16.. 

Homeless and neglected 
boys from 8 to 16. 

Orphan and homeless chil¬ 
dren. 

Destitute children. 

Orphan girls from 4 to 8.... 

Orphan and destitute girls. 

Orphan and destitute girls. 

Orphan children. 

Orphan and homeless chil¬ 
dren. 

Indigent orphan boys from 
6 to 10. 

Orphan children under 3... 

Orphan children from 6 to 10 

Destitute and homeless chil¬ 
dren. 

Destitute children. 

Odd Fellows’ orphan chil¬ 
dren. 


"3 

I 

U 

a- 


1885 
1900 

1865 

IS67 

1909 

1876 

1900 

1902 

1S78 

1860 

1886 

1868 

1893 

1883 

1883 

1872 

1S06 

1910 
1909 
1900 

1879 

1859 

1863 

1863 

1857 

1839 

1881 

1S48 

1900 

1897 

1902 

1856 

1883 


3 

2 

a 

0) 

H 

■3 

3) 

€ 

X) 

. a . 1 

t-i 

_o 

"3 


Yes. 

No. 

Yes. 

No. 

( 2 ) 

Yes. 

No. 

Yes. 

No. 

Yes. 

No. 

No. 

Yes. 

No. 

Yes. 

No. 

No. 

Yes. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

Yes. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

Yes. 

No. 


16 

5 

13 

5 

9 

4 

4 

8 

16 

1 

30 

4 

5 

36 

14 

7 

4 

5 
21 

14 

14 

19 
7 

17 

15 

6 
403 

7 

20 

15 

6 

8 


CHILDREN RECEIVED FOR FIRST 
TIME IN 1910. 


80 

83 

50 

16 

31 

38 

1 

32 

5 

44 

3 

25 

9 

11 

87 

22 

32 

52 

26 
145 

19 

21 

3 

108 

11 

10 

15 

202 

6 
30 

14 

21 

15 


80 

50 

30 

14 

26 

19 


4 

26 

12 

t 

8 

63 


16 

52 

26 

145 

11 

5 


1 

12 

202 

1 

21 


21 

9 


Through— 


8 

16 

3 

108 

11 

9 

3 


Public officials. 

Officials of the 
institution. 

Child-placing 

societies. 

Relatives or 

friends of child. 

Other agencies. 


SO 




9 



70 

4 




50 






16 

20 

.... 

1 

10 


10 

1 


27 



/ 







1 





32 





5 


20 

.... 

2 

21 

1 




3 





25 




3 

6 





11 


15 

.... 

36 

27 

9 




22 



32 




31 


7 

14 

. . . . 

26 





79 



33 

33 




17 

2 

0) 

0) 

( l ) 

(*) 

0) 




3 


2 

48 

.... 

25 

33 




11 





8 

2 




15 





202 





6 





30 


2 

8 

i 

1 

2 



21 






15 








1 Not reported, 


3 Indeterminate. 




































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


143 


CARE OF CHILDREN:' 1910—Continued. 


CHILDREN IN THE 
CLOSE OF 

INSTITUTION 

YEAR. 

AT 

CHILDREN 
OUTSIDE BUT 
UNDER 
SUPERVISION. 

.. 

CHILDREN 
PLACED IN 
FAMILIES 
DURING 
YEAR. 

CHILDREN 
DISCHARGED 
DURING YEAR. 

RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 

PAYMENTS DURING 
YEAR. 

VALUE OF 
PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

1 

Total. 

© 

Female. 

Dependent. 

Working boys or girls. 

Delinquent. 

Total. 


Derived from- 


Orphans and 
foundlings. 

Invalid or defec¬ 
tive. 

All other 

*c3 

O 

H 

© 

7i 

s 

Female. 

*3 

■*-» 

o 

H 

© 

"3 

Female. 

*3 

o 

© 

*3 

VH 

Female. 

Ap- 

pro- 

pria- 

tions. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources. 

Total. 

For 

run¬ 

ning 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total 

(includ¬ 

ing 

invested 

funds). 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

232 

232 


232 





50 

50 


67 

67 


CD 

(l\ 


«ftQ 074 


(i\ 

n\ 

m 

S63 074 

$43 074 

$20,000 

$500 000 

S500 000 

6 

220 

117 

103 

215 




5 




5 

5 

68 

41 

27 

10 979 

$5,000 

$2 680 

v / 

82 265 

v. ) 

SI 034 

21 902 

21,902 

245 000 

245.000 

7 

273 

131 

142 

270 



3 








36 

20 

16 

17 991 

1 479 

4 092 

12 420 

17,788 

17,788 


73,000 

73,000 

8 

86 

48 

38 

86 

- 










i 

21 1 

13 

8 

16 604 


6 800 

3 763 

6 131 

16 306 

13,206 

3,100 

12S,156 

103,000 

9 

31 

26 

5 

12 

.... 

5 

2 

12 




2 

2 


11 

8 

3 

(») 

(») 

0) 

(*) 

(>) 

(>) 

« 


(*) 

0) 

10 

75 

48 

27 

20 


55 



(!) 

( l ) 

(!) 

12 

6 

6 

33 

16 

17 

8 211 

4,092 

37 

1 452 

2,630 

9,130 

6,994 

2,136 

34,000 

33,000 

11 

48 

1 

47 

48 





12 

2 

10 

15 

1 

14 

3 


3 

2 709 

1,000 

1 409 


300 

2,709 

2,709 


8,101 

5,000 

12 

82 


82 

42 

1 

39 



27 


27 

19 


19 

30 


30 

11,790 

3,000 

8,790 



7,893 

7,893 


0) 

( l ) 

13 

31 

14 

17 

29 


2 






1 


1 

7 

5 

2 

5,718 

4,385 

200 

1,133 

5,817 

5,689 

128 

24,600 

12,000 

14 

75 

52 

23 

41 


34 



95 

o) 

0) 

26 

13 

13 

24 

17 

7 

12.129 

11,706 


423 

11,492 

11,492 


73,050 

65,000 

15 

40 


40 

36 


4 







22 


22 

20,521 


780 

4,503 

15,238 

19,586 

19,586 


379,642 

75,000 

16 

205 

120 

85 

205 











42 

27 

15 

24,755 


16,755 

4,000 

4.000 

23,550 

22,550 

1,000 

120,000 

100,000 

17 

2S 

17 

11 

22 


6 



1 

1 








( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

18 

96 

50 

46 

96 





8 

7 

1 

8 

7 

1 




5,29S 

4,405 

450 

443 

5,450 

5,450 

15,000 

15,000 

19 

87 

68 

19 

50 


37 



2 

1 

1 

54 

37 

17 

17 

12 

5 

171,209 




171,209 

171,475 

171,475 


1,592,163 

327,653 

20 

75 

33 

42 

75 










14 

11 

3 

11,179 


11,179 


16,434 

14,774 

1,660 

52,700 

52,700 

21 

32 

16 

16 

32 











7 

2 

5 

5, soo! 



5,800 

5,800 

5,800 


100,000 

100,000 

22 

24 

24 


10 


3 


11 

4 

4 


6 

6 

• • • • 

20 

20 


5,187 

852 

2,338 

319 

1,678 

4*744 

4,744 


* 1,000 

« 1,000 

23 

18 

18 






18 







0) 

(i) 


5,262 


3,221 

2,041 


C 1 ) 

0) 


10,000 

10,000 

24 

144 

144 


96 




48 

22 

22 


37 

37 


102 

102 


35,512 

25,267 

2,668 

1,448 

6,129 

34,654 

27,944 

6,710 

60,000 

60,000 

25 

107 

57 

50 

107 











14 

8 

6 

34,256 


17,0.53 


17,203 

27,101 

20,597 

6,504 

191,884 

67,000 

26 

( i ) 

0) 

C 1 ) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

( i > 

0) 


0) 

(*) 

(*) 

0) 

(*) 

0) 

0) 

(*) 

(>) 

o) 

0) 

0) 

(>) 

( i ) 

(») 

( i) 

o) 

( i ) 

27 



56 

56 





2 


2 




2 


2 

32,371 




32.371 

31,719 

18,737 

12,982 

944,000 

250,000 

28 

104 


104 

65 


129 



201 


201 

97 


97 

101 


101 

8,000 

2,250 

1,364 

2,540 

2,746 

12,279 

12,279 


150,000 

150,000 

29 

87 


87 

87 








9 


9 

17,095 

4,200 

475 

12,414 

17,600 

17,600 


343,500 

75,000 

30 

88 

44 

44 

88 






« 





12 

9 

3 

14,921 


2,286 

2,076 

10,559 

15,965 

14,158 

1,807 

212,400 

45,000 

31 

Oft 

17 

0 

19 


14 



1.33 

89 

44 

41 

24 

17 

19 

16 

3 

7,544 

2,000 

1,827 

1,317 

2,400 

5,914 

5,914 


17,500 

11,500 

32 

ZO 

1 

1 455 







26 

26 





210 

210 


2,401,414 

2,401,414 

631,579 

563,341 

68,23S 

26,467,732 

18,987,482 

33 

I t 

IQ 

Q 

10 

13 









1 

1 


5,694 


370 

418 

4,906 

5,445 

5,445 


30,500 

18,000 

34 

127 

04 

33 

197 











9 

7 

2 

18,677 


18,677 



16,415 

16,000 

415 

50,000 

50,000 

35 

51 

95 

9fi 

18 


33 









(*) 

0) 

0) 

8,720 

1,250 

2,819 

867 

3,784 

8,695 

8,695 


4,500 

4,500 

36 

Qft 

Qft 


36 




30 

14 

16 

3 

1 

2 

30 

13 

17 

12,290 


5,873 


6,417 

12,244 

11,672 

572 

C) 

C 1 ) 

37 

ftO 

QO 

Q7 

aq 





9 

1 

1 




9 

6 

3 

15,712 


15,712 



14,651 

8,574 

6,077 

196,000 

60,000 

38 


oZ 

0/ 























3 Included in report of St. John’s Lutheran Home. 4 Equipment. 




























































































































































































































144 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table I.— INSTITUTIONS FOR THE 


M 

a 

§ 

S3 

o 


39 

40 

41 

42 

43 

44 

45 

46 

47 

48 

49 

50 

51 

52 

53 

54 

55 

56 

57 

58 

59 

60 

61 

62 

63 

64 

65 

66 

67 

68 

69 

70 

71 

72 

73 

74 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


PENNSYLVANIA—Continued. 

Philadelphia—C ontinued. 

Home of the Merciful Savior for Crip¬ 
pled Children. 

4400 Baltimore Ave. 

House of St. Michael and All Angels_ 

613 North Forty-third St. 

House of the Holy Child. 

625 North Forty-third St. 

Howard Institution. 

1612 Poplar St. 

Jewish Foster Home and Orphan Asy¬ 
lum. 

700 Church Lane (Germantown). 
Lincoln Institution and Educational 
Home. 

324 South Eleventh St. 

Methodist Episcopal Orphanage. 

Monument Ave. 

Northern Home for Friendless Children. 
Twenty-third and Brown Sts. 

Philadelphia Home for Infants. 

4618 Westminster Ave. 

Presbyterian Orphanage. 

Fifty-eighth St. and Chester Ave. 

St. John’s Orphanage.. 

1722 Rittenhouse St. 

St. Joseph’s Female Orphan Asylum 
and Gonzaga Memorial. 3 
862 Church Lane (Germantown). 

St. Joseph’s House.. 

727 Pine St. 

St. Joseph’s Orphan Asylum 4 .. 

700 Spruce St. 

St. Martin’s College.. 

713 Catherine St. 

St. Mary Magdalen de Pazzi’s Orphan¬ 
age. 

730 Montrose St. 

St. Vincent’s Home. - .. 

Twentieth and Race Sts. 

St. Vincent’s Orphan Asylum.... 

Tacony Station. 

Shelter for Colored Orphans.. 

Forty-fourth and Wallace Sts. 
Southern Home for Destitute Children. 
Broad and Morris Sts. 

Western Home for Poor Children. 

Forty-first and Baring Sts. 

Widener Memorial Industrial Training 
School. 

North Broad St. and Olney Ave. 
Young Women's Union, Nursery and 
Home. 6 

422 Bainbridge St. 

Pittsburgh: 

Children’s Temporary Home. 

2044 Centre Ave. 

Christ Church Home for Babies. 

Harker St., West End. 

Coleman Industrial Home for Colored 
Boys. 

2816 Wylie Ave. 

Day Nursery and Temporary Home for 
Children. 

3035 Perrysville Ave. 

German Protestant Orphan Asylum... 
Pauline St. 

Home for Colored Children. 

Termon Ave. 

Home for the Friendless.. 

423 East Park Way. 

Industrial Home for Crippled Children 

1426 Denniston Ave. 

Pittsburgh Home for Babies. 

2503 Centre Ave. 

Pittsburgh Home for Girls. 

3456 Bouquet St. 

Pittsburgh News Boys’ Home. 

Stevenson and Locust Sts. 

Protestant Home for Boys. 

330 North Ave., North Side. 

Protestant Orphan Asylum.. 

Perrysville Ave. 


Supervised or conducted by— 


Private corporation. 


Private organization. 

Private corporation.. 

Association of Women 
Friends. 

Federation of Jewish Chari¬ 
ties. 

Protestant Episcopal Church 


Private corporation (Metho¬ 
dist Episcopal). 

Private corporation. 


Private corporation. 


Private corporation (Pres¬ 
byterian). 

Trustees of J. Edgar Thom¬ 
son Endowment. 

Sisters of Charity. 


Catholic Diocese of Phila¬ 
delphia. 

Sisters of Charity. 


Church of the Evangelists... 

Missionary Sisters of St. 
Francis. 

Sisters of Charity. 

School Sisters of Notre Dame 

Society of Friends. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private individual. 


Federation of Jewish Chari¬ 
ties. 


Pittsburgh Association for 
Improvement of the Poor. 
Young Woman’s Guild of 
Christ M. E. Church. 
Private corporation. 


Private corporation. 


Private corporation (G er- 
man Evangelical Protes¬ 
tant). 

Woman’s Christian Associa¬ 
tion. 

Private corporation.. 


Private corporation. 
Private corporation. 
Private corporation. 
Private corporation. 
Private corporation. 
Private corporation. 


Class of children received. 


Homeless crippled children . 

Crippled children. 

Homeless children.. 

Homeless girls from 10 to 18. 

Orphan and neglected Jew¬ 
ish children. 

Orphan boys from 5 to 9. 


Destitute orphan children 
from 4 to 10. 

Orphan, homeless, and neg¬ 
lected children. 

Orphan children under 4, 
and boarders. 

Orphan children. 


Railway employees’ orphan 
girls. 

Orphan girls.. 


Homeless and destitute boys. 

Orphan girls from 4 to 7. 

Destitute boys from 8 to 14.. 
Italian orphan girls. 


Destitute infants and found¬ 
lings. 

Catholic orphan children 

Orphan and homeless girls 
from 2 to 7. 

Destitute children.. 


Orphan and homeless chil¬ 
dren. 

Crippled children. 


Orphan and working moth¬ 
ers’ children. 


Destitute and neglected chil¬ 
dren. 

Indigent and neglected chil¬ 
dren under 3. 

Delinquent and dependent 
boys, and boarders. 

Working mothers’ children.. 


Orphan homeless and neg¬ 
lected children. 

Orphan and destitute chil¬ 
dren. 

Neglected and deserted chil¬ 
dren. 

Crippled children from 3 to 
12 . 

Orphan and neglected babies 
under 1. 

Delinquent and dependent 
girls. 

Newsboys, waifs, and home¬ 
less boys. 

Working boys from 14 to 21.. 

Protestant orphan children.. 


«o 

a 


7Z 


1881 

1886 

1896 

1853 

1855 

1866 

1879 

1853 

1873 

1878 

1882 


1890 

1798 

1905 
1874 

1858 

1856 

1822 

1849 

1850 

1906 

1885 

1874 

1909 

1909 

1886 

1887 

1880 

1861 

1902 

1904 

1901 

1884 

1886 

1833 


S3 


a 

i-4 

'O 

S3 

A 

o 

S3 

a 

t. 

_o 

"o 

U 


No. 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

Yes. 


No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

Yes. 

No. 

Yes. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

No. 

No. 

Yes. 

No. 

No, 

Yes. 

No. 

Yes. 

No. 

No. 


11 

6 

9 

4 

32 

(») 

28 

31 

13 

20 

8 


29 

12 

9 

0) 

90 

19 

10 

6 

2 

5 

4 

7 

22 

11 

12 

3 

23 

6 
45 


CHILDREN RECEIVED FOR FIRST 
TIME IN 1910. 





Through— 




CO 

*3 

^ o 
o-~ 

tQ 

a 

§8 

tx 

CO ^ 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

6 

o 

p 

3 

3 

Ph 

iS.3 

O £ 

se-S 

o 

2 8 

A 

o 

© 
4^ CO 

o3 ^ 

s .§ 

C 1 ) 

C 1 ) 

0) 

0) 



(>) 



9 

2 

7 

i 



8 

21 

7 

14 

3 



14 

12 

29 


12 


12 



20 

9 



29 

3 

3 





3 

24 

12 

12 




24 

43 

26 

17 

4 



38 

50 

28 

22 




50 

20 

C 1 ) 

C 1 ) 

3 



13 





2 


2 












45 

45 


8 

10 

4 

20 

25 


25 




25 

0) 

3 

0) 


0) 



3 



3 

222 

109 

113 

78 


12 

132 

109 

57 

52 

4 



105 

24 

24 

20 



2 

42 

21 

21 



42 

31 

22 

9 




31 

5 

5 




5 

162 

0) 

4 

(>) 

7 




162 

11 




11 

45 

(') 

( l ) 

0) 

( l ) 

.... 

( l ) 

38 

38 


23 



14 

60 

40 

20 

15 



39 



24 

12 

12 

3 



19 

8 

5 

3 




7 

8 

5 

3 

1 

1 

2 

4 

17 

13 

4 

1 

1 


14 

28 


28 

19 



9 

38 

38 


28 

.... 

6 

4 

20 

20 






113 

61 

52 




113 





(0 


C 1 ) 


20 


1 Not reported. 

2 Colored only. 

3 Included in report of St. Joseph’s Orphan Asylum, 700 Spruce Street, Philadelphia. 

4 Includes report of St. Joseph’s Female Orphan Asylum and Gonzaga Memorial, 862 Church Lane, Philadelphia. 




































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


145 


CARE OF CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


CHILDREN IN THE INSTITUTION 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

AT 

CHILDREN 
OUTSIDE BUT 
UNDER 
SUPERVISION. 

CHILDREN 
PLACED IN 
FAMILIES 
DURING 
YEAR. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Dependent. 

Working boys or girls. 

Delinquent. 

Orphans and 
foundlings. 

Invalid or defec¬ 
tive. 

All other. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

0) 

( i ) 

( l ) 

0 

( l ) 

0) 

( i ) 

0 

0 

0 

0 




28 

5 

23 

27 

1 




32 

7 

25 

21 


11 






1 


1 

34 


34 

10 




24 







189 

112 

77 

146 


43 



67 

46 

21 




30 

30 

.... 

30 





( i ) 

0 


0 

0 

.... 

134 

54 

80 

134 





4 

4 


1 

1 


168 

100 

68 

168 





38 

28 

10 

25 

18 

7 

54 

32 

22 

54 






125 

45 

80 

125 





7 

5 

2 




18 


18 

18 

























170 

170 


120 



50 


0 

0 





150 


150 

150 









35 

35 




35 









24 


24 

24 











482 

190 

292 

253 


229 









280 

144 

136 

280 











53 


53 

53 





6 


6 

2 


2 

71 

33 

38 



71 



(!) 

( i ) 

(!) 




60 

39 

21 

18 


42 



1 

1 

1 


1 

94 

58 

36 


94 









56 

0) 

'( i ) 

56 





0 

( i ) 

0 

0 

0) 

0 

46 

27 

19 

12 


34 






1 

1 


25 

0) 

0 

16 


9 









26 

26 

7 


1 


18 




1 

1 


43 

33 

10 

40 

3 




2 


2 




40 

15 

25 

40 





3 

3 





59 

36 

23 

36 

2 

21 



7 

4 

3 

5 


5 

114 

56 

58 

28 


86 



35 

20 

15 

3 

1 

2 

44 

19 

25 


44 










36 

21 

15 

11 


25 









39 


39 

20 




19 

(i) 


(!) 

(i) 


0) 

158 

158 


146 

4 

V • . . 

8 


351 

351 


4 

4 


25 

25 





25 








185 | 

88 

97 

185 





38 

18 

20| 

26 

12 

14 


CHILDREN 
DISCHARGED 
DURING YEAR. 

R 

Total. 

ECEIPTS 

DURING YEAR. 

Derived from— 

PAYMENTS DURING 
YEAR. 

VALUE OF 
PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Total. 

a 

<a5 

a 

<X> 

Ph 

Ap- 
pro- 
p na¬ 
tions. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources 

Total. 

For 

run¬ 

ning 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total 

(includ¬ 

ing 

invested 

funds). 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

0) 

0) 

( 1 ) 

$27,754 


$14,356 


$13,398 

$46,557 

$38,751 

$7,806 

0) 

(i) 

39 

12 

4 

8 

5,069 


2,612 

$410 

2,047 

4,723 

4,723 

$48,000 

$13,000 

40 

35 

10 

25 

6,628 


4,715 

1,699 

214 

5,698 

5,698 


27,000 

19,000 

41 

10 


10 

4,605 


918 

804 

2,883 

4,605 

4,364 

241 

43,900 

9,200 

42 

22 

13 

9 

30,181 


22,478 


7,703 

34,187 

33,370 

817 

370,000 

200,000 

43 

0 

0 


7.438 


326 

12 

7,100 

8,509 

7,017 

1,492 

0 

0 

44 

13 

7 

6 

57,794 


794 


57,000 

61,131 

30,117 

31,014 

1,450,000 

250,000 

45 

17 

15 

2 

21,368 

$6,250 

900 


14,218 

24,993 

21,390 

3,603 

290,533 

123,000 

46 

48 

25 

23 

8,595 

1,734 

1,930 

2,063 

2,868 

8,312 

8,312 


62,223 

25,000 

47 

4 

2 

2 

22,700 


9,500 

1,200 

12,000 

27,276 

26,276 

1,000 

175,000 

100,000 

48 

1 


1 

12.079 




12,079 

11,439 

11,439 




49 











50 

75 

75 


22,000 


22,000 



21,019 

19,698 

1,321 

150,000 

150,000 

51 

25 


. 25 

0 


0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

52 

(1) 

(i) 


12,970 


12,470 


500 

13,369 

13,369 


( l ) 

( 1 ) 

53 

1 


1 

0 


0 

35 

0 

2,276 

0 

0 

0 

0 

54 

139 

82 

57 

28,017 

3,000 

18,842 

5,613 

562 

29,603 

29,603 


350,000 

350,000 

55 

56 

0 

0 

24,932 

1,500 

9,522 

3,893 

10,017 

23,932 

18,432 

5,500 

40,000 

40,000 

56 

16 

.... 

16 

10,999 


2,281 

75 

8,643 

10,963 

9,788 

1,175 

225,000 

75,000 

57 

47 

28 

19 

11,479 


1,520 


9,959 

11,300 

10.900 

400 

400,000 

200,000 

58 

21 

13 

8 

6,420 


1,545 

2,138 

2,737 

6,591 

5,802 

789 

91,200 

51,650 

59 

1 

1 


&87,180 


5 87,180 



87,180 

87,180 


2,000,000 

2,000,000 

60 

0) 

0 

0 

12,742 


7 10,221 

1,495 

1,026 

12,984 

11,584 

1,400 

66,341 

50,000 

61 

46 

27 

19 

4,341 


2,183 

140 

2,018 

4,077 

3,920 

157 

25,506 

25,506 

62 

1 

(i) 

0 

4,389 


1,334 

1,403 

1,652 

3,714 

3,714 




63 

23 

23 

3,326 


415 

2,204 

707 

3,326 

3,326 




64 

1 

1 


3,447 

2,000 


1,447 


6,672 

5,138 

1,534 

24,000 

24,000 

65 




6,539 

1,360 

944 

4,235 

6,361 

5,312 

1,049 

48,200 

41,000 

66 

19 

9 

10 

15,686 

5,000 

1,799 

301 

8,586 

12,068 

12,068 

201,000 

35,000 

67 

38 

24 

14 

20,859 

3,000 

1,014 

2,392 

14,453 

24,376 

24,376 


390,611 

81,758 

68 

6 

6 

.... 

17,801 

5,000 

4,164 

1,089 

7,548 

17,801 

17,801 


151,500 

108,500 

69 

15 

5 

10 

6,181 

3,107 

482 

1,339 

1,253 

5,901 

5,901 


12,000 

12,000 

70 

( 1 ) 



4,088 

3,363 

725 



4,568 

4,398 

170 

C 1 ) 

( l ) 

71 

136 

136 


25,985 

7,500 

3,209 

1,583 

13,693 

41,801 

29,123 

12,678 

195,500 

180,000 

72 

(i) 



8 5 854 


8 391 

2,435 

3,028 

5,024 

5,024 


70,000 

50,000 

73 

70 

v / 

30 

40 

42,766 


1,062 

4,225 

37,479 

45,066 

40,347 

4,719 

1,032,000 

200,000 

74 


6 Institution maintained by Mr. P. A. B. Widener. 

6 Statistics of inmates are for Day Nursery and Temporary Shelter; finances are for entire organization. 

7 Includes $9,000 from Federation of Jewish Charities. 

8 Exclusive of donations other than cash. 


44153°—14 


10 






















































































































































































































146 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table I.— INSTITUTIONS FOR THE 




— . 





§ 

© 

CHILDREN RECEIVED 

FOR 

FIRST 










TIME IN 1910. 








© 


© 













’© 


© 





Through— 


t-.' 






i 

© 








& 

NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of children received. 


§ 

bX) 

03 

+5 

c3 

co 




c/5 

© 

tu 

c 

L* 

© Td 

CO 

G 

G 

.© 

-t-* 

G 




•d 

© 

'O 

g 

a 

a 

g 

s 

© 

nd 

O 

© 

i 

c 

© 

© 

>> 

O 

Pi 

8 

© 



© 

# 03 

’© 

e 

o 

© 

^ G 
C 

S 

ci .© 

p-t 

41 

co PS 

© rG 

© 

4-> CO 
c3 r P 

*© 

G 

© 

t£ 

ci 

X2 

CO 

fl 

HH 




S 

© 

i-* 

o 

'o 

O 

s 

£ 

32 

C3 

Ph 

o 

H 

© 

s 

© 

~~3 

p 

& 

fg-S 

o 

7Z. w 
43 

O 

—< G 

<x> © 

pjS 

rP 

O 


PENNSYLVANIA—Continued. 
















Pittsburgh— Continued. 









45 


91 




75 



Orphan and destitute chil¬ 
dren. 

1849 

Yes. 


21 

95 

50 

4 




Troy Hill Road (Ewalt Station). 

St. Joseph’s Protectory for Homeless 
Boys. 

Diocese of Pittsburgh (Ro¬ 
man Catholic). 




8 

2 

3 

li 


76 

Homeless and dependent 
boys from 12 to 20. 

1895 

Yes. 

24 

24 










552 Vine St. 









9 




12 


77 

St. Michael’s German Roman Catholic 
Orphan Asylum. 


Orphan and needy children 
of St. Michael’s Congrega- 

1873 

No. 


2 

12 

3 
















55 Pius St. 


tion. 







236 





557 

78 


Sisters of Mercy. 

Homeless and neglected chil¬ 
dren. 

1840 

No. 


5 

557 

321 





Crafton Station (Idlewood). 











79 


St. Peter’s Evangelical Lu¬ 
theran Church. 

Orphan children. 

1896 

No. 


4 

7 

4 

3 




7 


Robinson Road. 






13 




19 


80 

Sunshine Home 

Private corporation.... 

Children of working mothers. 

1906 

No. 


4 

25 

12 

3 



3 

3532 California Ave. 



15 




19 


81 

United Presbyterian Orphans’ Home.. 
Monterey St. 

United Presbyterian Wo¬ 
men’s Association. 

Orphan children. 

1878 

No. 


9 

29 

14 

5 

5 












Pottsville: 















82 

Children's Home of Pottsville. 

Pottsville Benevolent Asso- 

Destitute, neglected, and 
homeless children. 

1872 

Yes. 


4 

9 

8 

1 

5 



4 


Quincy: 

ciation. 



1 




9 








83 

Quincy United Brethren Orphanage... 
Radnor: 

United Brethren in Christ... 

Orphan children.. 

1903 

No. 


8 

9 

8 












11 


84 

Home and Hospital of the Good Shep- 

Church of the Good Shep- 

Convalescent or healthy 

1874 

No. 


9 

19 

6 

13 

.... 

2 

3 

3 


herd. 

herd (Episcopal). 

homeless children. 














Garrett Hill P. O. 















Reading: 













24 


85 

Home for Friendless Children.. 

Private corporation.. 

Orphan, destitute and neg¬ 
lected children. 

1884 

No. 


9 

32 

23 

9 

8 




1016 Centre Ave. 







17 


86 

St. Catherine’s Female Orphan Asylum. 
1026 Franklin St. 

Sisters of Charity... 

Indigent girls . 

1872 

Yes. 


3 

20 


20 

2 



1 













Redington: 















87 

William T. Carter Junior Republic_ 

Private organization. 

Homeless incorrigible boys.. 

1898 

No. 

1 

10 

21 

21 


8 


4 

9 


Scotland: 








88 

Soldiers’ Orphans’ Industrial School... 

State of Pennsylvania 

Soldiers’ destitute orphan 
children. 

1905 

Yes. 


39 

144 

84 

60 




144 










Scranton: 















89 

St. Patrick’s Orphanage . 

Sisters of the Immaculate 

Orphan and destitute chil¬ 
dren. 

1875 

Yes. 


3 

85 

40 

45 


85 




1425 Jackson St. 

Heart of Mary. 










South Bethlehem: 














90 

Children’s Home of South Bethlehem.. 

Private corporation. 

Destitute children from 2 to 

1882 

No. 

1 

7 

17 

12 

5 


1 

2 

14 


Sunbury: 


14. 








91 


Independent Order of Odd 
Fellows of Pennsylvania. 

Odd Fellows’ orphan chil¬ 
dren. 

1896 

No. 


18 

21 

9 

12 




21 


R. D. 2. 









Topton: 














92 

Lutheran Orphans’ Home . 

General Council of the Lu- 

Orphan and destitute chil¬ 
dren. 

1897 

No. 


10 

18 

9 

9 




18 


Villa Maria: 

theran Church. 















93 

St. Joseph’s Orphanage.. 

Sisters of the Holy Humility 
of Mary. 

Orphan girls. 

1864 

No. 



10 


10 




10 


R.D. 2 (via Lowellville, Ohio). 











Wallingford: 















94 

Philadelphia Orphan Society... 

Private corporation 2 . 

Orphan children from 2 to 9. 

1814 

No. 


12 

16 

0) 

0) 




16 


Warminster: 







95 

Christ’s Home for Children. 

Band of Workers. 

Homeless and destitute chil- 

1903 

Yes. 



26 

18 

8 



1 

24 

1 

983 North Fifth St., Philadelphia 


dren. 









(office). 
















Washington: 















96 

Children’s Home . 

County of Washington. 

Indigent, dependent, and 
neglected children. 

1883 

Yes. 


9 

86 

52 

34 

47 

6 

5 

28 


R. D. 10. 







Waynesburg: 















97 

Greene County Children's Home.. 

County of Greene . 

Neglected and homeless chil¬ 
dren. 

1884 

Yes. 


2 

32 

20 

12 





32 

Wilkes-Barre: 
















98 

Home for Friendless Children. 

Private corporation. 

Orphan and indigent chil¬ 
dren. 

1862 

No. 


9 

59 

39 

20 

10 



49 


335 South Franklin St. 







Williamsburg: 















99 

Industrial Training Home... . 

County of Blair. 

. Homeless and needy chil- 

1901 

Yes. 


4 

24 

16 

8 

24 





Williamsport: 


dren. 














100 

Boys’ Industrial Home. 

Private corporation. 

Orphan, wayward, and 
homeless boys. 

1898 

No. 


9 

15 

15 





15 


“617 East Third St. 









101 

Girls' Training School. 

Private corporation. 

Orphan, homeless, and neg¬ 
lected girls. 

1895 

No. 


2 

4 


4 




4 


131 East Third St. 












102 

Goldy Home . 

Private corporation. 

Homeless children. 

1908 

Yes. 


i 

15 

7 

8 




3 

12 

819 Meade St. 










Womelsdorf: 















103 

Bethany Orphans' Home. 

Reformed Church in the 

Orphan, friendless, and des¬ 
titute children. 

1863 

No. 

2 

19 

38 

22 

16 




38 



United States. 







York: 















104 

Children's Home . 

Private corporation. 

Orphan, homeless, and indi¬ 
gent children under 12. 

1865 

No. 


9 

33 

20 

13 




27 

6 

East Philadelphia St. 








Zelienople: 














105 

Orphans’ Home and Farm School. 

Institution of Protestant 

Destitute orphan children... 

1854 

Yes. 

2 

12 

16 

10 

6 




16 



Deaconesses. 







' Not reported. 


- Presbyterian, Episcopalian, and Friends. 








































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


147 


1 


CARE OF CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


CHILDREN IN THE 
CLOSE OF 

INSTITUTION 

YEAR. 

AT 

CHILDREN 
OUTSIDE BUT 
UNDER 
SUPERVISION. 

CHILDREN 
PLACED IN 
FAMILIES 
DURING 
YEAR. 

CHILDREN 
DISCHARGED 
DURING YEAR. 

RECEIPTS 

DURING YEAR. 

PAYMENTS DURING 
YEAR. 

VALUE OF 
PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

o 

e 

a> 

a 

a3 

8 

D 

fa 

Dependent. 

id 

60 

(-4 

o 

C/3 

o 

& 

60 

.g 

O 

•s 

a 

03 

& 

03 

A 

Total. 

Derived from— 


T3 

a . 

C/3 G 

u. **- 

o 

js 

a> 

o P 

3* 

c<3 

> 

5 

(h 

(33 

3 

O 

< 

^■4 

03 

o 

H 

-03 

"o3 

a 

^03 

a 

03 

fa 

fH 

cJ 

o 

H 

03 

c3 

a 

03 

a 

03 

fa 

"c3 

o 

H 

03 

Ts 

a 

03 

a 

03 

fa 

Ap- 

pro- 

pria- 

tions. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources 

Total. 

For 

run¬ 

ning 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total 

(includ¬ 

ing 

invested 

funds). 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

280 

144 

136 

280 





5 

5 





105 ! 

65 

40 

S21 831 


$1 002 

85 348 

$15 481 

$16 454 

$13 179 

$3 275 

$113 750 

8105 000 

75 

64 

64 


36 

1 

10 


17 

4 

4 

.... 

4 

4 

.... 

16 

16 


11,421 


3,405 

4,041 

3,975 

12,679 

12,016 

663 

40,000 

40,000 

76 

32 

13 

19 

32 





2 

1 

1 

2 

1 

1 




2,818 


2,349 

469 


2,781 

2,664 

117 

32,000 

32 000* 

77 

1108 

599 

509 

700 

7 

401 






75 


75 

402 

225 

177 

73 743 


65 578 

8 165 


72,958 

52,958 

20,000 

700,000 

700 000 

78 

21 

13 

8 

21 








4 

4 





2 500 


1 400 

300 

800 

2,000 

1,500 

500 

17 000 

12 000 

79 

41 

0) 

(!) 

41 














(i) 


732 

1 582 

m 

3 620 

3 420 

200 

16 000 

16 000 

80 

48 

25 

23 

48 





3 

2 

1 

3 

2 

1 

16 

9 

7 

7 408 


1 235 

1 815 

V / 

4 358 

7,097 

7,097 

(i) 

0) 

81 

23 

16 

7 

23 





5 

3 

2 

1 


1 

3 


3 

2,680 

$1,175 

489 

847 

169 

2,493 

2,493 


1,500 

82 

72 

47 

25 

72 











1 

1 


13,611 

5 371 


8 240 

11,420 

8,420 

3,000 

56,607 

56,607 

83 

36 

18 

18 

30 

1 

5 









23 

9 

14 

7,443 


4,612 

811 

2 020 

7,225 

7,225 

60,000 

20,000 

84 

71 

41 

30 

38 


33 



(■> 

0) 

(■) 

12 

10 

2 

19 

12 

7 

8,603 

5 134 

521 

1 062 

1 886 

8,607 

7,580 

1,027 

83,000 

43,400 

85 

80 


80 

66 


14 






8 


8 

3,653 

449 

707 

819 

1,678 

3,553 

2,993 

560 

(i) 

(i) 

86 

25 

25 




13 


12 







22 

22 


6,794 


6,000 

777 

17 

6,587 

6,587 


35,000 

35,000 

87 

376 

224 

152 

376 











110 

65 

45 

90,676 

90,676 


90,676 

69,857 

20,819 

175,000 

175,000 

88 

150 

85 

65 

150 











60 

25 

35 

11,500 

325 

9,975 

1,200 


11,500 

11,500 

50,000 

50,000 

89 

40 

22 

18 

32 


8 



5 

2 

3 

3 

1 

2 

16 

9 

7 

3,018 

900 

188 

1,508 

422 

3,898 

3,898 


11,000 

11,000 

90 

118 

69 

49 

118 











12 

10 

2 

14,594 


14,594 



14,925 

14,229 

696 

55,297 

50,000 

91 

105 

62 

43 

105 





18 

11 

7 

18 

11 

7 




13,615 


11,100 


2,515 

12,369 

4,500 

7,869 

65,000 

65,000 

92 

39 


39 

39 








1 


1 

10 


10 

362 


150 

212 

1,041 

830 

211 

12,000 

12,000 

93 

86 

36 

50 

86 





2 

2 





16 

(!) 

(i) 

16,835 


79 

171 

16,585 

16,149 

16,149 


(i) 

0) 

94 

97 

48 

49 

67 

3 

27 









14 

10 

4 

11,398 


11,398 


9,728 

9,728 


25,000 

25,000 

95 

76 

44 

32 

40 

2 

32 


2 

55 

28 

27 

33 

18 

15 

34 

20 

14 

11,617 

11,200 

226 

191 

11,614 

11,614 


75,000 

75,000 

96 

39 

0) 

(i) 



39 









20 

13 

7 

8,447 

8,447 




8,447 

(i) 

(!) 

36,900 

36,900 

97 

40 

22 

18 

40 





45 

13 

32 

24 

18 

6 




3,332 



3,332 

14,324 

2,482 

11,842 

123,476 

79,801 

98 

29 

18 

11 

9 

1 

17 


2 

8 

3 

5 

8 

3 

5 




3,956 

3,956 



3,956 

3,409 

547 

36,000 

20,000 

99 

40 

40 


20 


10 


10 







4 

4 


8,000 

2,000 


2,000 

4,000 

11,500 

8,500 

3,000 

30,000 

30,000 

100 

28 


28 

3 


25 









4 


4 

3,506 

2,604 

869 

33 

3,743 

3,743 

/ 

12,500 

12,500 

101 

7 

3 

4 



7 






1 

1 


11 

6 

5 

600 

50 


550 

600 

600 


1,000 

1,000 

102 

170 

98 

72 

170 





14 

13 

1 

7 

5 

2 

19 

15 

4 

! 318,450 


3 11,634 


6,816 

18,804 

15,934 

2,870 

187,621 

140,000 

103 

36 

19 

17 

22 


14 



70 

39 

31 




13 

7 

6 

13,491 

875 

808 


11,808 

12,818 

12,818 

140,650 

64,500 

104 

105 

55 

50 

105 








16 

o 

c) 




11,109 

. 

4,500 

4,440 

2,169 

11,109 

8,940 

2,169 

65,000 

65,000 

105 


3 Exclusive of donations other than cash. 








































































































































































































Institution number. 


148 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table I.— INSTITUTIONS FOR THE 


NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of children received. 

'd 

a> 

g 

Ut 

4> 

Colored children received. 

Number of cottages. 

Paid employees at close of year. 

CHILDREN RECEIVED FOR FIRST 
TIME IN 1910. 

"c3 

O 

H 

<6 

13 

ao 

13 

i 

o 

Through— 

iS 

g 

o 

0 

o 

o 

3 

a 

Ph 

a> 

Vh O 

°‘S 

& 

'5 2 
B-S 

O 

tc 

a 

C3 a 

3<i 

2§ 

S 3 

O 

U 

o 'C 

c/o ^ 

-•§ 

o 

C/0 

cS *0 
—i 3 
o O' 

«£ 

C/0 

.2 

o 

a 

a> 

to 

a 

Sh 

a> 

5 

o 

RHODE ISLAND. 















Barrington: 















St. Andrew’s Industrial School.. 

Private corporation (Epis- 

Orphan, neglected, and in- 

1893 

Yes. 

2 

8 

9 

£ 



i 


e 



copal). 

digent boys. 













Bristol: 















Bristol Home for Destitute Children.. . 

Churches of Bristol. 

Friendless and destitute chil- 

1875 

(>) 

( i ) 

( l ) 

( l ) 

(>) 

« 

(») 

( l ) 

( l ) 

0) 

C 1 ) 



dren. 













Providence: 















Children’s Friend Society. 

Private corporation. 

Indigent children. 

1835 

No. 


11 

19 

8 

ii 




1£ 


23 Tobey St. 















Providence Shelter for Colored Children. 

Private corporation__ 

Orphan and indigent, nhil- 

1838 

Yes. 


5 

10 

6 

4 




It 


20 Olive St. 


dren. 













Rhode Island Home for Working Boys. 

Private corporation. 

Orphan boys. 

1898 

(‘) 

C 1 ) 

0) 

0) 

C 1 ) 


C 1 ) 

(i) 

( l ) 

(>) 

(>) 

42 Park St. 







Rhode Island S. P. C. C. Receiving 

Rhode Island Society for the 

Neglected, abused, and aban- 

1882 

Yes. 



115 

52 

63 


115 




Home. 

Prevention of Cruelty to 

doned children. 













98 Dovle Ave. 

Children. 














St. Aloysius’ Home. 

Sisters of Mercy. 

Orphans from 6 to 12. 

1850 

Yes. 



211 

86 

125 

32 

S 


170 


473 Prairie Ave. 















St. Marv’s Orphanage. 

Private corporation (Epis- 

Needy children under 8. 

1879 

No. 


16 

16 

9 

7 




16 


128 Fifth £5t. (East Providence). 

copal). 














St. Vincent de Paul’s Infant Asylum 

Sisters of Divine Providence. 

Orphans and abandoned 

1891 

Yes. 



193 

100 

93 

C 1 ) 

(i) 

(>) 

(i) 

(■) 

Regent Ave. 


children under 6. 










State Home and School. . . . 

State of Rhode Island... 

Dependent, neglected, and 

1885 

Yes. 

7 

30 

82 

47 

35 

82 







abused children. 













Woonsocket: 















Day Nursery and Children’s Home. 

Private corporation. 

Orphan children from 2 to 12. 

1889 

No. 


3 

11 

4 

7 




11 

.... 

Cass Ave. 















Franciscan Sisters’ Orphanage. 

Franciscan Missionary Sis- 

Orphan children. 

1904 

No. 


3 

56 

25 

31 

1 

13 


42 


48 Hamlet Ave. 

ters. 














St. Vincent de Paul’s Home. 

Sisters of St. Francis. 

Orphan children. 

1905 

(*) 



2 


2 




2 


62 Pond St. 














SOUTH CAROLINA. 















Abbeville: 








# 







Farm Homes 4 . 

Private corporation. 

Mothers with or without 

1897 

No. 

6 


6 

5 

1 


5 


1 




children, and homeless 















children. 













Charleston: 















Charleston Orphan House. 

City of Charleston. 

Orphan and indigent chiU 

1790 

No. 


22 

32 

22 

10 




32 


160 Calhoun St. 


dren. 













Jenkins’ Orphanage. 

Orphan Aid Society. 

Orphan and destitute chil- 

1891 

( 5 ) 


40 

30 

27 

3 

14 



16 


20 Franklin St. 


dren. 












Clinton: 















Thornwell Orphanage. 

Presbyterian Church in the 

Indigent orphan children.... 

1875 

No. 

15 

34 

38 

16 

22 




38 


Broad St. 

United States. 













Columbia: 















Epworth Orphanage. 

Methodist Episcopal Church, 

Orphan children. 

1896 

No. 

7 

20 

39 

19 

20 

1 



38 



South. 














Industrial Home. 

Private corporation. 

Orphan and destitute chil- 

1899 

( 5 ) 


3 

19 

11 

8 


19 






dren from 1 to 14. 












Greenwood: 















Connie Maxwell Orphanage. 

Private corporation (Bap- 

Normal orphan children. 

1891 

No. 

9 

27 

30 

14 

16 




30 


Greenville: 

tist). 














Odd Fellows’ Orphans’ Home. 

Independent Order of Odd 

Odd Fellows’ orphan chil- 

1905 

No. 

2 

3 

8 

4 

4 




8 


R. D. 7. 

Fellows of South Carolina. . 

dren. 













Mount Pleasant: 















Home for Destitute Children. 

Private organization. 

Homeless and destitute chil- 

1882 

( 6 ) 


1 

10 

3 

7 




10 




dren. 












Yorkville: 















Church Home Orphanage. 

Protestant Episcopal Church 

Orphan and working chil- 

1852 

No. 

«2 

8 

20 

8 

12 


10 


10 




dren. 













SOUTH DAKOTA. 















Beresford: 















Bethesda Orphans’ Home. 

Hanges' Norwegian Luth- 

Orphan, neglected, and 

1896 

( 8 ) 


4 

7 

3 

4 




2 

5 


eran Synod. 

needy children. 












Sioux Falls: 















Receiving Home. 

South Dakota Children’s 

Neglected, dependent, and 

1893 

Yes. 


11 

99 

45 

54 


50 


49 


Tenth St. and Sherman Ave. 

Home Soc ety. 

needy children. 













TENNESSEE. 















Brighton: 















Wiliam H. Dunlop Orphanage . 

Associate Reformed Pres- 

Orphan, homeless, and neg- 

1903 

No. 


2 

9 

2 

7 




9 


R. D. 1 . 

byterian Church. 

lected children. 












Chattanooga: 















Children’s Refuge . 

King’s Daughters and Sons .. 

Destitute children . 

1888 

No. 


1 

31 

15 

16 




31 


115 West Terrace St. 











Steele Orphanage . 

Private corporation . 

Destitute children under 14. 

1884 

Yes. 


5 

28 

18 

10 

5 



15 

8 

1 Strait St. 










Vine Street Orphans’ Home . 

Woman’s Christian Associa- 

Destitute orphan children ... 

1878 

No. 


5 

85 

44 

41 

85 


_ 



240 Vine St. 

tion. 













Clarksville: 















Odd Fellows’ Home . 

Independent Order of Odd 

Odd Fellows’ orphan chil- 

1898 

No. 


9 

15 

12 

3 





15 

R. D. 4 

Fellows of Tennessee. 

dren. 













1 Not reported. 3 Indeterminate. 

3 Included in report of Rhode Island Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children. «Includes branches at Summerville and Charleston. 




































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


149 


CARE OF CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


CHILDREN IN THE INSTITUTION 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

AT 

CHILDREN 
OUTSIDE BUT 
UNDER 
SUPERVISION. 

CHILDREN 
PLACED IN 
FAMILIES 
DURING 
YEAR. 

CHILDREN 
DISCHARGED 
DURING YEAR. 

RECEIPTS 

DURING YEAR 


PAYMENTS DURING 
YEAR. 

VALUE OF 
PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Total. 

© 

Is 

3 

Female. 

Dependent. 

Working boys or girls. 

Delinquent. 

Total. 

Derived from— 


Orphans and 
foundlings. 

Invalid or defec¬ 
tive. 

All other. 

cs 

o 

e 

© 

n 

Female. 

o 

EH 

© 

a 

Female. 

*03 

O 

H 

© 

*C3 

a 

Female. 

Ap- 

pro- 

pria- 

tions. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources 

Total. 

For 

run¬ 

ning 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total 

(includ¬ 

ing 

invested 

funds). 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

35 

35 


30 


5 









10 

10 


812,516 


86 581 

81,424 

$4,511 

$12,067 

$11,469 

$598 

$132,758 

$40,000 

1 

G) 

(>) 

G) 

0) 

0) 

o) 

G) 

o 

o 

0) 

(>) 

o) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

(*) 

(>) 

(') 

0) 

(■) 

g) 

(*) 

o) 

(>) 

0) 

(■> 

G) 

2 

65 

32 

33 

65 








i 

.... 



11 

7 

4 

13,289 


340 

1,781 

11 168 

12,897 

10,459 

2,438 

278,311 

62,130 

3 

21 

11 

10 

21 











12 

N 

5 

6,170 


309 

5,861 

5,186 

5,186 

20,500 

16,000 

4 

( i ) 

o) 

- - - - 

g> 

g> 

G) 

G) 

G) 

g) 

(0 

.... 

0) 

( i ) 

.... 

G) 

(') 


(>) 

g) 

(■) 

(>) 

0) 

(») 

(») 

o 

(*) 

G) 

5 

8 

3 

5 



8 









91 

45 

46 


( s > 


(t) 

m 

4,246 

3,857 

389 

9,000 

9,000 

6 

211 

86 

125 

211 





135 

60 

75 




218 

88 

130 

\ / 

14,800 

\ ) 

800 

2,000 

V / 

12,000 

14,800 

14,800 


(!) 

(l) 

7 

61 

32 

29 

23 


38 



5 

3 

2 

4 

2 

2 

12 

4 

8 

13,775 


8 8S4 

1,449 

3,442 

13,272 

13,272 


93,724 

25,500 

8 

144 

70 

74 

99 


45 



(i) 

(i) 

(i) 

17 


10 

116 

56 

60 

12 500 

82 500 

10,000 

12,500 

12,500 


(i) 

0) 

9 

183 

98 

85 

49 


134 



172 

92 

80 

48 

27 

21 

10 

9 

1 

32,642 

32 500 


142 

32,642 

32,642 


125,000 

125,000 

10 

20 

( 1 ) 

(1) 

20 





0) 

o 

o 

(i) 

( i ) 


2 

2 


2,266 

300 

239 

1 117 

610 

1,989 

1,989 


13,850 

3,850 

11 

116 

60 

56 

116 





2 

2 

45 

30 

15 

8,000 

500 

4 750 

2,750 

7,137 

6,786 

351 

40,000 

40,000 

12 

49 

24 

25 

35 


14 



59 

25 

34 




1 

1 


3,066 


1 753 

1,303 

10 

3,056 

2,877 

179 

15,000 

15,000 

13 

22 

10 

12 

17 


5 



5 

3 

2 

6 

3 

3 




1,591 

% 

1,591 


1,530 

1,530 



1 

221 

114 

107 

221 











22 

16 

6 

24,181 

8,997 


15,184 

24,181 

24,181 


0) 

(!) 

2 

106 

92 

14 

71 

3 



32 

254 

192 

62 

2 


2 

40 

37 

3 

14,272 

1,000 

5,833 

301 

7,138 

13,593 

12,957 

636 

51,028 

50,000 

3 

316 

111 

205 

316 












16 

25 

35,538 

29,226 


6,312 

35,528 

30,102 

5,426 

340,400 

213,400 

4 

208 

103 

105 

208 











.. 23 

11 

12 

28,784 


23,471 


5,313 

17,633 

12,408 

5,225 

200,000 

161,100 

5 

29 

21 

8 

29 








6 

6 





768 


496 


272 

925 

925 


7,000 

7,000 

6 

225 

95 

130 

225 











24 

8 

16 

32,821 


25,300 


7,521 

34,178 

26,233 

7,945 

171,000 

150,000 

4 

51 

23 

28 

51 














5,000 


5,000 


5,000 

5,000 

31,000 

31,000 

8 

12 

3 

9 

12 














1,750 


875 


875 

800 

800 


2,500 

2,500 

9 

80 

30 

50 

70 



10 








6 

2 

4 

4,726 


4,000 


726 

5,109 

4,679 

430 

36,450 

25,000 

10 

59 

33 

26 

53 

1 

5 



2 


2 

3 


3 

2 

1 

1 

9,984 


8,305 


1,679 

10,253 

6,797 

3,456 

75,000 

75,000 

1 

19 

10 

9 


19 



548 

247 

301 

113 

49 

64 

26 

14 

12 

( 7 ) 


( 7 ) 


( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

2 

19 

9 

10 

19 











3 

1 

2 

1,630 


855 


775 

1,345 

1,345 


9,000 

9,000 

1 

13 

5 

8 


13 









16 

10 

6 

945 

404 

344 

107 

90 

1,204 

1,204 


7,000 

5,500 

2 

61 

36 

25 

61 





77 

45 

32 







12,045 

1,500 

489 

56 

10,000 

12,550 

12,045 

505 

40,000 

40,000 

3 

43 

C 1 ) 

(l) 

43 





0) 

G) 

(■) 

(i) 

0) 

0) 

44 

0) 

0) 

3,957 

1,353 

466 

341 

1,797 

3,954 

3,750 

204 

31,791 

25,000 

4 

100 

53 

47 

100 





6 

2 

4 

5 

5 


15,207 


15,207 



15,841 

13,862 

1,979 

67,641 

60,000 

5 























6 Colored only. 

6 In addition to central receiving building 


7 Included in report of South Dakota Children’s Home Society. 
























































































































































































Institution number. 


150 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table I.— INSTITUTIONS FOR THE 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


Supervised or conducted by— 


Class of children received. 


0 

9 

o 


T3 

9 

> 

'3 




& 

o 

■d 

o> 


TENNESSEE—Continued. 


Y* 


o 


6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 


Knoxville: 

• Children’s Mission Home. 

120 West Cumberland A ve. 

St. John’s Orphanage. 

2403 East Linden Ave. (R. D. 4). 

Maryville: 

Blount County Industrial Home. 

Memphis: 

Church Home.. 

750 Jackson Ave. 

Day Nursery and Half Orphanage. 

762 Walker Ave. 

Leath Orphan Asylum. 

850 Manassas St. 

St. Peter’s Orphanage. 

Poplar St. and McLean Ave. 
Nashville: 

Monroe Harding Orphanage. 

Protestant Orphan Asylum. 

Waverly Place. 

Tennessee Baptist Orphans’ Home. 

Delaware Ave. 


Private organization. 

Private corporation (Epis¬ 
copal). 

County of Blount. 

Protestant Episcopal Church 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Sisters of Charity of Nazareth 


Presbyterian Church in the 
United States. 

Private corporation. 

Baptist Denominational 
Board. 


Orphan and homeless chil¬ 
dren. 

Orphan children. 


Destitute children. 

Orphan children. 

Foundlings, and destitute 
and neglected children. 
Orphan, destitute, and neg¬ 
lected children. 

Orphan children. 


Orphan children. 

Orphan and destitute chil¬ 
dren. 

Destitute orphan children... 


1890 

1873 

1894 

1867 

1900 

1852 

1841 

1893 

1S44 

1892 


No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

0) 

No. 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

l'S 

19 

20 


TEXAS. 

Austin: 

Children’s Home. 

1206 East Eleventh St. 

Corsicana: 

State Orphans’ Home. 

Dallas: 

Buckner Orphans’ Home. 

R. 3. 

St. Joseph’s Orphanage. 

Oak Cliff P. O.. 

St. Matthew’s Home for Children. 

Grand Ave. 

Fort Worth: 

Fort Worth Benevolent Home. 

Galveston: 

Galveston Orphans’ Home. 

Center St. and Avenue M. 

Home for Homeless Children. 

1019 Avenue K. 

St. Mary’s Orphanage. 

Forty-first St. and Avenue R. 
Grand Prairie: 

Juliette Fowler Christian Home. 

Houston: 

Bayland Orphans’ Home. 

De Pelchin Faith Home. 

1918 Chenevert St. 

Infants’ Home. 

1920 Oak St. 

Itasca: 

Presbyterian Home for Orphans. 

Luling: 

Bell Haven Orphans’ Home. 

Peniel: 

Peniel Orphans’ Home. 

San Antonio: 

Protestant Home for Destitute Children 
Kentucky Ave. 

St. John’s Orphanage. 

West Houston St. 

St. Joseph’s Orphan Asylum. 

Military Plaza. 

Waco: 

Methodist Orphanage. 

901 Herring Ave. 


Helping Hand Society 


State of Texas. 


Private corporation. 

Sisters of Charity of the In¬ 
carnate Word. 

Private corporation. 


County of Tarrant 


Private corporation. 

Society for the Help of Home¬ 
less Children. 

Sisters of Charity of the In¬ 
carnate Word. 

National Benevolent Associa¬ 
tion of Christian Church. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 


Presbyterian Church in the 
United States. 

Church of Christ.. 

Holiness churches.. 


Private corporation. 

Sisters of Charity of the In¬ 
carnate Word. 

Sisters of Charity of the In¬ 
carnate Word. 

Methodist Episcopal Church, 
South. 


Working women’s children.. 


Indigent and destitute chil¬ 
dren. 

Destitute orphan and other 
needy children. 

Orphan children. 

Orphan children from 3 to 9.. 


Dependent and indigent chil¬ 
dren. 

Orphan children.. 

Homeless children. 

Orphan children over 2. 


Orphan children from 3 to 12. 


Indigent orphan children 
from 6 to 18. 

Orphan children. 

Illegitimate infants. 


Destitute orphan children... 


Orphan children. 

Orphan and abandoned chil¬ 
dren. 

Orphan, destitute, and neg¬ 
lected children. 

Orphan boys under 14. 

Orphan girls. 


Destitute orphan children 
from 2 to 13. 


1902 

1889 

1879 
1907 

1900 

1885 

1880 
1894 

1869 

1904 

1866 

1892 

1896 

1905 

1899 

1901 

1880 

1890 

1870 

1S94 


No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

0) 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 


1 

2 

3 


UTAH. 

Murray: 

Lund School for Boys. 

Lund Ave. (R. D. 4). 

Salt Lake City: 

Keam’s St. Ann’s Orphanage. 

Twelfth St. S. and Fourth St. E. 
Orphans’ Home and Day Nursery... 
Twelfth St. S. and Tenth St. E. 


Church of Jesus Christ of 
Latter Day Saints. 

Sisters of the Holy Cross.... 

Private corporation. 


Wayward and dependent 
boys over 8. 

Indigent children. 

Orphan children. 


1908 

1891 

1883 


No. 


Yes. 

Yes. 


Number of cottages. 

Paid employees at close of year. 

CHILDREN received for 
TIME IN 1910. 

FIRST 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Through— 

Public officials. 

Officials of the 

institution. 

Child-placing 

societies. 

Relatives or 

friends of child. 

Other agencies. 

1 

4 

37 

(>) 

0) 

C 1 ) 

(>) 

( l ) 

(») 

0) 


1 

10 

4 

6 


10 





2 

13 

4 

9 


9 


4 



7 

82 

32 

50 




82 



4 

0) 

0) 

0) 

(!) 



C 1 ) 

(•) 

.... 

9 

172 

68 

104 

( l ) 

C 1 ) 

( l ) 

( l ) 

(0 


2 

100 

50 

50 

10 



90 




7 

5 

2 




7 


0) 

c) 

(*) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

C 1 ) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

.... 

7 

6 

1 

5 

3 

1 

.... 

2 

.... 


3 

44 

20 

24 




44 



34 

51 

25 

26 




51 


(*) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

(>) 

0) 

(*) 

(*) 

0) 

0) 



48 

26 

22 




48 


.... 

5 

12 

C 1 ) 

(*) 

( l ) 



0) 

.... 

.... 

5 

67 

41 

26 

9 

15 

13 

21 

9 

0) 

0) 

( l ) 

C 1 ) 

(») 

(>) 

C 1 ) 

(') 

(') 

( l ) 

.... 

5 

27 

12 

15 

(*) 

0) 

( l ) 

( l ) 

( l ) 



23 

6 

17 




23 


1 

4 

1 

1 





1 



4 

4 

4 





4 



8 

65 

(l) 

0) 




45 

20 


4 

145 

74 

71 





145 

4 

10 

16 

8 

8 




16 


3 


25 

7 

18 




25 



2 

9 

8 

1 




9 



6 

40 

20 

20 




40 




55 

55 


5 



50 




59 


59 




59 



10 

36 

18 

18 




36 



4 

39 

39 





39 



13 

163 

83 

80 




163 


.... 

5 

24 

14 

10 




24 

.... 


1 Not reported. 









































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


151 


CARE OF CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


CHILDREN IN THE INSTITUTION 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

AT 

CHILDREN 
OUTSIDE BUT 
UNDER 
SUPERVISION. 

CHILDREN 
PLACED IN 
FAMILIES 
DURING 
YEAR. 

CHILDREN 
DISCHARGED 
DURING YEAR. 

RECEIPTS 

DURING YEAR. 

PAYMENTS DURING 
YEAR. 

VALUE OF 
PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

1 Institution number. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Dependent. 

Working boys or girls. 

Delinquent. 

Total. 

Derived from— 


Orphans and 
foundlings. 

Invalid or defec¬ 
tive. 

All other. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Ap- 

pro- 

pria- 

tions. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources 

Total. 

For 

run¬ 

ning 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total 

(includ¬ 

ing 

invested 

funds). 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

36 

12 

24 

32 


4 









34 

22 

12 

$1,500 


81,500 



$1 225 

$1 225 




6 

36 

11 

25 

36 











G 

o 

4 

m 


m 


p) 

4 4^n 

9 7^n 

«?nn 

non 

«-n nnn 

7 

26 

7 

19 

13 


13 



( l ) 

( l ) 

( l ) 

( l ) 

( l ) 

p) 

( l ) 

( l ) 

( l ) 

\ ) 

1,708 

SI, 408 

\ ) 

300 


1 125 

970 

'JlUU 

155 

3 000 

3 000 

X 

75 

20 

55 

75 










66 

27 

39 


9 010 

cq 078 

89 797 

7 855 

fi 19Q 

1 71A 

m 


9 

48 

P) 

(«) 

P) 

3 

P) 









20 

p) 

p) 

p> 

75 

( l ) 

p> 

iOl 

P) 

4,250 

4,000 

250 

v ) 

7,500 

tv 

7,500 

10 

90 

37 

53 

81 


9 



43 

17 

26 

11 

5 

e 

57 

25 

32 

6 840 


607 

233 

6,000 

6 517 

5 289 

1 228 

229 500 

100 000 

11 

170 

80 

90 

170 





p) 

p) 

p) 

12 

4 

8 

(l) 

p> 

m 

10 150 


10 000 

150 

9 950 

9 000 

950 

75 000 

75 000 

12 

39 

21 

18 

39 








1 

V, J 

1 

3,600 


3 600 


4 500 

4 500 

25 000 

25 000 

13 

p) 

( i ) 

P) 

(*) 

P) 

p> 

( i ) 

p> 

p> 

p) 

p) 

p> 

p> 

p) 

p) 

p) 

P) 

p> 

p) 

p> 

p) 

p) 

P) 

P) 

p) 

p) 

p) 

14 

57 

22 

35 

57 











6 

1 

5 

13 933 


13 933 



13 933 

6 000 

7 933 

28 000 

28 000 

15 

. 24 

11 

13 

24 





L... 






3 


3 

1 717 


1 493 

224 


1 691 

1 670 

21 

3 000 

3 000 

1 

308 

139 

169 

274 

9 

25 









34 

12 

22 

52,000 

52,000 



52,000 

45 000 

7,000 

150,000 

150,000 

2 

o 

0) 

P) 

(0 

p) 

o 

P) 

p) 

* 

p> 

p) 

p> 

p) 

p) 

p) 

p> 

p) 

p> 

(') 

C 1 ) 

p> 

p) 

0) 

p> 

p> 

p> 

p> 

■ P) 

3 

69 

38 

31 

69 











21 

9 

12 

5, 910 

58 

5 052 

800 


5 910 

5 520 

390 

8 000 

8 000 

4 

40 

0) 

(i) 

40 





( l ) 

( l ) 

0) 

(!) 

( l ) 

(!) 

(i) 

0) 

0) 

4 500 

3 

250 

4 247 

4 500 

4 000 

500 

19 000 

18 000 

5 

24 

17 

7 

% 

16 

1 

7 



8 

5 

3 

15 

11 

4 

43 

28 

15 

3,450 

2,800 

250 

400 

3,450 

3,450 

25,000 

20,000 

6 

(■) 

P) 

c) 

( i ) 

P) 

P) 

P) 

p> 

( l ) 

p> 

p> 

p> 

p) 

p) 

p) 

p> 

p) 

p) 

p) 

p) 

p) 

P) 

p> 

p> 

p> 

p) 

p) 

7 

31 

0) 

C 1 ) 


1 

30 



9 

1 

8 




21 

8 

13 

( 2 ) 

p) 

( 2 ) 

p) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

8 

46 

33 

13 

46 








16 

5 

11 




( l ) 

( l ) 

0) 

(i) 

(i) 


0) 

( l ) 

9 

67 

29 

38 

67 





15 

4 

11 

21 

5 

16 




7,518 


6,585 


933 

7,367 

6,391 

976 

30,000 

30,000 

10 

21 

9 

12 

20 











2 

1 

1 

2,277 


579 

120 

1,578 

3,379 

3,379 


52,500 

27,500 

11 

68 

C 1 ) 

( l ) 

5 

1 

61 


1 

0) 

p) 

c i ) 

(D 

0) 

(1) 

11 

( l ) 

(!) 

4,938 


3,714 

1,224 

5,159 

5,046 

113 

15,000 

15,000 

12 

7 

4 

3 

7 





124 

p) 

p> 

19 

(i) 

( l ) 

1,707 


1,707 



1,3S0 

1,380 


4,000 

4,000 

13 

79 

36 

43 

79 









17 

10 

7 

23,015 


18,209 


4,806 

22,313 

11,239 

11,074 

40,000 

40,000 

14 

55 

12 

43 

55 








p) 

p> 


(i) 

( l ) 

( l ) 

3,000 


3,000 


(i) 

(!) 

0) 

25,000 

25,000 

15 

26 

11 

15 

26 





• 



6 

5 

1 

2, 700 


1,700 


1,000 

2,700 

1,500 

1,200 

12,500 

12,500 

16 

55 

25 

30 

55 











( l ) 

(!) 

p) 

4, 200 

100 

2,000 

200 

1,900 

4,900 

4,000 

900 

70,000 

50,000 

17 

105 

105 


105 











30 

30 

(!) 

(!) 

(!) 

0) 

(!) 

0) 

(D 

0) 

18 

109 


109 

109 





P) 


p) 




I 

22 


22 

0) 

(!) 

C 1 ) 

p) 

p> 

0) 

( l ) 

(!) 

(!) 

( l ) 

19 

130 

66 

64 

130 






36 

9 

27 

2 

2 


18,700 

700 

18,000 

IS,000 

16,000 

2,000 

105,000 

105,000 

20 

32 

32 






32 

p> 

( l ) 





p) 

p) 


5,650 


4,189 

1,221 

240 

4,189 

3,622 

567 

15,000 

15,000 

1 

175 

80 

95 

175 










11,600 



3,600 

8,000 

11,600 

10.000 

1,600 

160,000 

85,000 

2 

56 

0) 

p) 

56 











p> 

p) 

p) 

5,492* 

1,550 

1,688 

1,754 

500 

p) 

p> 

p> 

50,000 

50,000 

3 


2 Included in report of Society for the Help of Homeless Children. 










































































































































































































































Institution number. 


152 BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table I.— INSTITUTIONS FOR THE 


1 

2 

3 

4 

1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 
21 
22 

23 

24 


25 


26 

27 

28 

29 

30 

31 

32 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


Supervised or conducted by— 


VERMONT. 


Burlington: 

Home for Destitute Children. 

Shelburne Road. 

St. Joseph’s Orphanage 2 . 

North Ave. 

St. Albans: 

Warner Home for Little Wanderers... 
High St. and Chauncey Place. 
Westminster: 

New England Kurn Hattin Homes 3 ... 


Private corporation. 

Sisters of Charity of Provi¬ 
dence. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 


VIRGINIA. 


Alexandria: 

Children’s Home. 

406 Duke St. 

Bon Air: 

Bethany Home Orphanage. 

South Richmond R. D. 3. 
Boydton: 

Bethany Home. 

Danville: 

Danville Orphanage. 

1015 North Main St. 
Fredericksburg: 

Assembly’s Home and School. 

Prince Edward and Charlotte Sts. 

Female Chaiity School. 

Twelfth and Main Sts. 

Hampton: 

Weaver Orphan Home. 

Lynchburg: 

Lynchburg Female Orphan Asylum.... 

Odd Fellows’ Home.. 

Presbyterian Orphans’ Home. 

R. D. 4. 

Norfolk: 

Bonney Home for Girls 6 . 

13 Boissevain Ave. 

Day Nursery and Children’s Home. 

511 Chapel St. 

Holt Street Orphan Asylum. 

203 Holt St. 

Jackson Orphan Asylum. 

112 Charlotte St. 

St. Mary’s Orphan Asylum. 

172 Chapel St. 

Turney Home for Boys. 

268 Bank St. 

Petersburg: 

Petersburg Female Orphan Asylum.... 
237 South Sycamore St. 
Portsmouth: 

Portsmouth Orphan Asylum. 

503 North St. 

Richmond: 

Female Orphans’ Home. 

703 East Leigh St. 

Foundling Hospital. 

425 North Thirty-second St. 

Friends’ Orphan Asylum. 

112 West Charity St. 

Holy Innocent Foundling Asylum. 

709 North First St. 

Masonic Home. 

Methodist Orphanage. 

Station A. 

Richmond Male Orphan Asylum. 

Amelia St. 

St. Joseph’s Orphan Asylum. 

Fourth and Marshall Sts. 

St. Paul’s Church Home. 

506 East Leigh St. 

Virginia Home for Infants. 

100 West Clay St. 

Roanoke: 

Ebenezer Home. 

Ninth Ave. and Seventh St. 

St. Vincent’s Male Orphanage. 

Salem: 

Baptist Orphanage of Virginia. 

Lutheran Orphan Home. 


Allison Woman’s Christian 
Temperance Union. 

Private corporation. 


Colored Orphan Relief So¬ 
ciety. 

Private corporation. 


Presbyterian Church in the 
United States. 

Private corporation (Epis¬ 
copal). 

Tidewater Orphan Associa¬ 
tion. 

Private corporation. 

Independent Order of Odd 
Fellows of Virginia. 

Presbyterian Church in the 
United States. 

Private corporation.. 

Private organization.. 

Female Orphan Society of 
Norfolk. 

Private corporation (Epis¬ 
copal). 

Sisters of Charity.. 

Private corporation.. 


Methodist Episcopal Church, 
South. 

Private corporation. 


Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

St. Joseph’s Society for Col¬ 
ored Missions. 

Masonic Grand Lodge of 
V irginia. 

Methodist Episcopal Church, 
South. 

Private corporation. 

Sisters of Charity. 

St. Paul’s Protestant Epis¬ 
copal Church. 

Private corporation. 


Private organization. 

Sisters of Charity of N azareth. 

Private corporation (Bap¬ 
tist). 

United Synod in the South.. 


CHILDREN RECEIVED FOR FIRST 
TIME IN 1910. 


Class of children received. 

'd 

© 

a 

d 

a 

s 

< v 
>■< 

Colored children received. 

Number of cottages. 

Paid employees at close of; 


-f-s 

o 

H 

'rt 

s 

3 

£ 

<K 

Through— 

A 

.OS 

O 

6 

o 

o 

3 

p 

^ d 

<*-1 c 
°*43 

■£? 

to 

.9 

J| 

si 

CO 

A 

O 

f-> # 

O'd 

—• o 

4-i CO 

c3 TJ 
— £ 

<x> 

« s 

CO 

’o 

£ 

<x> 

fcJD 

03 

i-4 

<D 

A 

o 

Destitute children. 

1865 

Yes. 

(») 

0) 

(>) 

0) 

C 1 ) 

(!) 

0) 

(*) 

0) 

(») 


1854 

Yes 











Orphan, homeless, neglect- 

1881 

Yes. 


7 

24 

14 

10 




24 


ed, and indigent children. 













Homeless boys from 7 to 14.. 

1894 

No. 

2 

11 

34 

34 

.... 

1 



33 

.... 


1902 

No. 


3 

12 

6 

6 




12 


dren from 4 to 12. 














1894 

No. 



20 

12 

8 




14 

6 

Colored orphan children. 

1903 

Yes. 

( l ) 

(») 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

C 1 ) 

(*) 

0) 

Homeless children 

1896 

No. 

1 

4 

11 

4 





11 



1893 

No. 


18 

7 

5 

2 





7 

sionaries’ children. 










Orphan and dependent chil- 

1802 

No. 

.... 

2 

4 

i 

c 

1 



3 

- - . . 

dren. 













Orphan, dependent, and 

1904 

(<) 

1 

1 

9 

i 

2 




3 

.... 

neglected children. 














1849 

No. 


17 

13 


13 




13 



1902 

No. 


20 

8 

3 

5 





8 

dren. 














1902 

No 

2 

7 

( 5 ) 

( 5 ) 

( 5 ) 







1910 

No. 








Orphan and dependent chil- 

1909 

(*) 

i 

2 

40 

18 

22 




40 


dren. 













Orphan and homeless girls.. 

1S04 

No. 

.... 

3 

8 

.... 

8 




S 

.... 

Orphan and destitute girls 

1856 

No 


1 

2 


2 




. 2 


Orphan girls from 3 to 13. 

1834 

No. 


2 

9 


9 




9 


Homeless boys. 

1886 

(>) 

(*) 

0) 

0) 

0) 


0) 

( l ) 

C 1 ) 

( l ) 

0) 

Orphan girls from 3 to 13.... 

1S48 

No. 

.... 

2 

4 

.... 

4 

1 

1 

.... 

2 

.... 

Destitute orphan children 

1S56 



2 


3 

4 




7 


Neglected and dependent 

1S05 

No. 


4 

3 


3 




3 


girls from 3 to 12. 













Foundlings. 

1894 

No. 


5 

8 

4 

4 




8 


Orphan and abandoned chil- 

1872 

(*) 


2 

6 

2 

4 

2 



4 


dren. 












Abandoned colored infants.. 

1895 

Yes. 

(>) 

0) 

0) 

(») 

0) 

0) 

0) 

( l ) 

( l ) 

0) 

Masons’ dependent orphan 

1890 

No. 


6 

3 

1 

2 




3 


children. 













Orphan and destitute chil- 

1900 

No. 

3 

( l ) 

22 

16 

6 




22 


dren. 












Orphan and dependent boys. 

1844 

No. 


0) 

14 

14 





14 


Indigent and neglected girls.. 

1S34 

No. 


15 


,5 


7 

8 



Dependent and neglected 

1859 

No. 


3 

3 


3 


3 




girls. 













Indigent and abandoned in-. 

190S 

No. 


7 

13 

6 

7 

2 



11 


fants and boarders. 













Orphan and needy children. 

1910 

No. 


1 

39 

20 

19 




39 


Orphan boys from 4 to 12.... 

1893 

No. 



9 

9 





9 


Orphan children. 

1S92 

No. 

5 

20 

5 

2 

3 




5 


Orphan and needy children 

1888 

No. 


7 

21 

10 

11 




21 


from 5 to 12. 








1 






1 Not reported. 

2 Included in report of Providence Orphan Asylum and Hospital. 

3 Includes two homes, at Westminster and Rockingham, respectively. 


4 Colored only. 

6 No children received since fire in 1909. 

5 Not opened until 1911. 


















































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


153 


CARE OF CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


CHILDREN IN THE INSTITUTION 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

AT 

CHILDREN 
OUTSIDE BUT 
UNDER 
SUPERVISION. 

CHILDREN 
PLACED IN 
FAMILIES 
DURING 
YEAR. 

CHILDREN 
DISCHARGED 
DURING YEAR. 

RECEIPTS 

DURING YEAR. 

PAYMENTS DURING 
YEAR. 

VALU 
PROPEI 
CLOSE O 

E OF 

ITY at 

Total. 

a> 

| 

Female. 

Dependent. 

Working boys or girls. 

Delinquent. 

Total. 


Derived from— 


F YEAR. 

Orphans and 
foundlings. 

Invalid or defec¬ 
tive. 

All other. 

o 

H 

c3 

a 

Female. 

c3 

+* 

O 

H 

cJ 

o3 

a 

Female. 

*C3 

-4^> 

o 

Eh 

<6 

*cQ 

Female. 

Ap- 
pro- 
p na¬ 
tions. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources 

Total. 

For 

run¬ 

ning 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total 

(includ¬ 

ing 

invested 

funds). 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

P) 

P) 

c) 

P) 

(0 

( i ) 

P) 

o) 

p) 

P) 

p) 

p> 

P) 

p> 

p) 

P) 

p) 

p) 

p> 

p) 

p) 

p) 

P) 

pj 

0) 

p) 

p) 

35 

17 

18 

13 


22 



2 


2 




25 

13 

12 

$4 246 


$340 

$1 516 

*9 390 

84 335 

84 1SS 

8147 

non 

827 non 

78 

78 


60 


18 



1 

1 


15 

15 


3 

3 


14 427 


10 196 

1 '202 

3,029 

17 651 

14 850 

2,801 

85 000 

65 000 

14 

0) 

0) 

4 

1 

9 






p) 

p) 

p) 

5 

4 

1 

m 

P) 

700 

p) 

iso 

180 

5 000 

5 000 

47 

30 

17 

47 








3 

2 

1 

\ / 

4 500 

4 000 

500 

3 750 

3 500 

200 

6 000 

6 000 

(>) 

(■) 

P) 

P) 

0) 

0) 

P) 

p) 

p> 

0) 

P) 

• 

p) 

0) 

p) 

p) 

p) 

p> 

p) 

0) 

p> 

p) 

p) 

P) 

P) 

p) 

p) 

P) 

34 

14 

20 

32 

2 







7 

5 

2 

4 

1 

3 

3,194 

$900 

2,174 


120 

3 052 

3,052 


29,000 

27,500 

49 

29 

20 

49 











x 

5 

3 

18,000 

« 

18,000 


18 000 

15 000 

3,000 

40,000 

40,000 

8 


8 

6 


2 









0) 

(!) 

0) 

1.200 


100 


1 100 

1 200 

1 200 


6, 200 

5,000 

35 

11 

24 

3 


32 



11 

2 

9 




7 

2 

5 

873 


401 

447 

25 

911 

911 


10,000 

10,000 

78 


78 

78 











14 


14 

18,763 




18, 763 

17,216 

17,216 


444,936 

126, 636 

114 

62 

52 

114 





1 


1 




3 

i 

2 

29,003 


1,479 


27,524 

27,358 

27,358 


84,629 

84, 629 

32 

20 

12 

32 











8 

3 

5 

20,000 


20,000 


15,000 

12,500 

2,500 

75,000 

75,000 





















350,000 

40,000 

17 

9 

8 

11 


6 



23 

9 

14 

23 

9 

14 




840 


100 

288 

452 

840 

840 


32 


32 

32 











4 


4 

2,189 


1,200 

458 

531 

2,575 

2,575 


20, 828 

20, 828 

0) 


( l ) 



0) 









3 


3 

1,840 


7 1,840 



2,451 

2,341 

110 

24,500 

7,000 

55 

.... 

55 

41 

.... 

14 



3 

.... 

3 

2 

.... 

2 

5 

.... 

5 

p) 


0) 

(■) 

p) 

p) 

p) 

p) 

p) 

p> 

P) 

P) 

.... 

0) 

0) 

p) 

p) 

p) 

p> 

p> 

.... 

p) 

p) 

.... 

p) 

p) 

.... 

0) 

p> 

p) 

0) 

p) 

0) 

p) 

p) 

p> 

p) 

13 


13 

13 





5 


5 

5 


5 




2,920 


2,500 


420 

1,947 

1,947 


24,500 

15,000 

19 

5 

14 

19 








6 

4 

2 




2,027 



2,027 

2, 732 

2,732 


44,600 

10, 000 

57 


57 

49 


8 









3 


3 

6, 700 




6, 700 

6, 700 

6, 700 


25,000 

25,000 

9 

6 

3 

9 





183 

75 

108 




7 

4 

3 

1,760 

200 

75 

285 

1,200 

1,605 

1,605 


46,500 

4,000 

17 

8 

9 

16 


1 






4 

2 

2 




926 

150 

776 



817 

817 


8, 000 

8,000 

0) 

p> 

(>) 

o 

p> 

p) 

P) 

p) 

p) 

p) 

0) 

0) 

p) 

p) 

p> 

p) 

(>) 

p) 

p) 

p) 

p) 

(>) 

p) 

(>) 

p) 

p> 

p) 

63 

34 

29 

63 





2 

1 

1 

1 


1 

1 

1 


16,208 


14,525 


1,683 

13,522 

11,456 

2,066 

55,467 

30,000 

115 

54 

61 

80 


35 






24 

13 

11 

2 

1 

1 

17,428 


17,428 



13,421 

11,058 

2,363 

181,000 

175,000 

45 

45 


45 











14 

14 


4,207 


241 

50 

3,916 

4, 864 

4, 400 

464 

0) 

0 ) 

60 


60 

60 





50 


50 




10 


10 

0) 

(■) 

p) 


0) 

0) 

(i) 


0) 

(!) 

20 


20 

18 

] 

] 






2 


2 

2 


2 

2,400 


2,400 

2,000 

2,000 


0) 

0) 

15 

7 

8 

15 








1 

1 


1 

1 


3,575 


75 

1,500 

2,000 

3,575 

3,200 

375 

250 

250 

22 

12 

10 

22 





0) 

0) 

0) 

P) 

p) 

0) 




8 721 


8 721 


752 

752 




28 

28 

28 





p) 

p) 

2 

2 


0) 

p) 

0) 

p) 

p> 

(i) 

0) 

0) 

(!) 

(i) 

165 

80 

85 

165 









12 

5 

7 

30,628 

30,628 

34,217 

24,196 

10,021 

100,000 

100,000 

80 

37 

43 

80 














6,512 


9 5,912 

(10) 

600 

6,512 

5,912 

600 

50,000 

40,000 


rO 

6 

D 

a 

o 

• —A 

3 


Vj 

a 


1 

2 

3 

4 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 
21 
22 

23 

24 

25 

26 

27 

28 

29 

30 

31 

32 


7 Includes income from invested funds. 

8 Exclusive of donations other than cash. 


9 Includes receipts from care of inmates. 

10 Included in donations. 


4 






























































































































































































































154 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table I.— INSTITUTIONS FOR THE 


10 

n 

12 


13 


14 


8 

9 

10 


l 

NAME AND LOCATION. 


WASHINGTON. 

Everett: 

Orphans’ Home. 

Twenty-second and Highland Sts. 
Parkland: 

Lutheran Children’s Home. 


Poulsbo: 

Martha Marie Orphans’ Home. 


Seattle: 

Detention Home. 

500 Ninth Ave. 

Seattle Children’s Home. 

West Ninth and McGraw Sts. 

Seattle Parental School. 

Mercer Island (East Seattle). 

Seattle Receiving Home. 

Sixty-fifth and Jones Sts. 

Spokane: 

Church Home for Children. 

East 307 Empire Ave. 

Home of the Friendless. 

Hemlock St. and Euclid Ave. 

Orphans’ Home of Spokane. 

East 127 Bridgeport Ave. 

St. Joseph’s Orphanage. 

Superior St. 

Spokane Receiving Home. 

605 North River St. 

Tacoma: 

Children’s Industrial Home. 

South Thirtieth and Washington Sts 

Walla Walla: 

Northwestern Home < (Orphan Depart¬ 
ment.) 

WEST VIRGINIA. 

Charleston: 

Davis Child’s Shelter. 

1118 Washington St. 

Elkins: 

Elkins Children’s Home. 


Elm Grove: 

Manual Training School. 

St. John’s Home.. 

St. Vincent’s Home.. 

Huntington: 

Colored Orphans’ Home. 

R. D. 2. 

Parkersburg: 

Henry Logan Children’s Home.. 
2406 Murdock Ave. 
Wheeling: 

Children’s Home.. 

Woodsdale. 

St. Alphonsus Orphan Asylum. 
2126 Market St. 

WISCONSIN. 

Appleton: 

Children’s Receiving Homo_ 


Dousman: 

Farm School for Boys. 


Elm Grove: 

Visitation Orphanage. 

Green Bay: 

St. Joseph’s Orphan Asylum. 


La Crosse: 

St. Michael’s Orphan Asylum. 
R. D. 1. 

Milwaukee: 

Detention Home... 

Eleventh and Galena Sts. 


Protestant Orphan Asylum, 
nd F 


North and Prospect Aves. 

St. Joseph’s Orphan Asylum. 

Thirteenth and Euclid Aves. 

St. Rose’s Orphan Asylum.. 

Lake Drive and East North Ave. 

St. Vincent’s Infant Asylum. 

483 Greenfield Ave. 

1 Not reported. 

2 Indeterminate. 


Supervised or conducted by— 


Snohomish County Orphan¬ 
age Association. 

Norwegian Lutheran Synod. 

Norwegian Lutheran Dea¬ 
coness Institute of Minne¬ 
apolis. • 

County of King.. 

Ladies’ Relief Society of 
Seattle. 

Seattle Public Schools.. 

Washington C h i 1 d r e n’s 
Home Society. 

Private corporation (Epis¬ 
copal). 

Ladies’ Benevolent Society. 

Private organization.. 

Sisters of St. Francis. 

Washington Children’s 
Home Society. 

Private corporation. 

Northwestern Christian Be¬ 
nevolent Association. & 


Children’s Home Society of 
West Virginia. 

West Virginia Humane So¬ 
ciety. 

Xaverian Brothers. 

Sisters of St. Joseph.. 

Sisters of St. Joseph.. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Sisters of Divine Providence. 


Children’s Home Society of 
Wisconsin. 


Private corporation. 


School Sisters of Norte Dame. 
School Sisters of Notre Dame. 


Franciscan Sisters of the Per¬ 
petual Adoration. 

County of Milwaukee. 


Private corporation. 

Felician Sisters. 

Sisters of Charity... 
Sisters of Charity... 


Class of children received. 


Orphan children. 


Orphan and homeless chil¬ 
dren. 

Orphan children. 


Neglected and delinquent 
children, pending action of 
court. 

Orphan and indigent chil¬ 
dren. 

Truant boys. 

Dependent children for 
adoption. 

Dependent children. 

Orphan and neglected chil¬ 
dren. 

0. 

Orphan and destitute chil¬ 
dren. 

Dependent children for 
adoption. 

Orphan, abandoned, and in¬ 
digent children. 

Orphan and other dependent 
children. 


Homeless children from 1 to 

12 . 

Orphan, dependent, neg¬ 
lected, and homeless chil¬ 
dren. 


Orphan boys over 10. 

Orphan boys. 

Orphan girls from 3 to 12.... 

Orphan and abandoned chil¬ 
dren. 

Destitute and friendless chil¬ 
dren. 

Destitute and friendless chil¬ 
dren. 

Orphan and neglected chil¬ 
dren. 


Normal dependent children 
for “homing.” 

Dependent and homeless 
boys. 


Destitute girls. 


Orphan and destitute chil¬ 
dren. 

Dependent and neglected 
children. 

Delinquent and dependent 
children pending action of 
court. 

Orphan, homeless, and neg¬ 
lected children. 

Orphan children from 3 to 16. 

Orphan and destitute girls.. 

Foundlings, orphan, and de¬ 
pendent children under 5. 


T3 

01 

■3) 

a 

3 

o 


1900 

1902 

1891 

1909 

1885 
1900 
1896 

1904 

1886 
0 
1890 
1S96 

1890 

1908 

1896 

1899 

1904 
1888 
1887 

1900 

1885 

1870 

1890 

1892 

1903 

1858 

1877 

1870 

1905 

1850 

1907 

1848 

1S77 


a 

43 

o 

"d 


o 

U 


Yes. 

0 

0 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

No. 

Yes. 

( l ) 

( l ) 

Yes. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 


No. 

No. 

No. 

Yes. 


( l ) 

No. 

No. 


Yes. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

No. 

Yes. 

Yes. 


0 


0 


6 

13 

16 

2 

8 

0 

5 

4 


0 


15 

6 


12 

21 


3 Included in report of Washington Children’s Home 
* Temporarily discontinued in 1910. 


CHILDREN RECEIVED FOR FIRST 
TIME IN 1910. 


Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Through— 

Public officials. 

Officials of the 

institution. 

Child-placing 

societies. 

Relatives or 

friends of child. 

Other agencies. 

0 

0 

0 




0 

.... 

49 

28 

21 




49 


10 

7 

3 




10 


307 

168 

139 

307 





72 

35 

37 

16 



49 

7 

114 

114 


114 





217 

113 

104 

116 



88 

13 

SO 

0 

0 




80 


45 

27 

18 




45 


0 

.0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

86 

41 

45 

22 



64 


81 

41 

40 

47 



29 

5 

8 

5 

3 

3 




5 

52 

23 

29 

5 



47 


183 

(i) 

0) 


183 




7 

7 




7 


25 

25 



25 




22 


22 




22 


10 

6 

4 




10 


O) 

0 

0 

0) 

0 

0 

0 

0 

30 

18 

12 




30 


20 

11 

9 




20 


130 

65 

65 




130 


25 

25 


11 

1 

.... 

13 

.... 

8 


8 




8 


77 

39 

38 




72 

5 

60 

25 

35 

11 



19 

30 

0 

0 

0) 

0) 

0 

0) 

0 

O) 

36 

19 

17 




36 


61 

15 

46 




61 


28 


28 

1 

. . . . 

2 

25 

.... 

95 

45 

50 

4 

.... 

4 

87 

.... 


So ciety. 

























































































































GENERAL TABLES 


155 


CARE OF CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


CHILDREN IN THE 
CLOSE OF 

INSTITUTION 

YEAR. 

AT 

CHILDREN 
OUTSIDE BUT 
UNDER 
SUPERVISION. 

CHILDREN 
PLACED IN 
FAMILIES 
DURING 
YEAR. 

CHILDREN 
DISCHARGED 
DURING YEAR. 

RECEIPTS 

DURING YEAR. 


PAYMENTS DURING 
YEAR. 

VALUE OF 
PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

*c3 

o 

d 

3 

d 

8 

<£> 

Dependent. 

C/3 

3 

b£ 

O 

CO 

o 

W> 

a 

3 

(h 

o 

£ 

G 

O' 

G 

a 1 

a 

p 

Total. 

Derived from— 

d 

G . 

c3 w 
fcjO 

C/3 G 

G- 

sl 

0 

i 

8 

3 

3 

r 

a 

u 

rC 

O 

< 

3 

o 

d 

a 

d 

a 

o> 

p 

c3 

o 

H 

d 

a 

d 

c3 

a 

© 

73 

+5 

O 

d 

73 

a 

d 

73 

a 

a» 

P 

Ap- 

pro- 

pria- 

tions. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources 

Total. 

For 

run¬ 

ning 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total 

(includ¬ 

ing 

invested 

funds). 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

( 1 ) 

0 ) 

(!) 

( 1 ) 





0 ) 

(0 

( l ) 

(>) 

(0 

(0 

0 ) 

0 ) 

0 ) 

0 ) 

0 ) 




0 ) 

0 ) 


$ 22,200 

$ 20,000 

51 

30 

21 

51 





28 

20 

8 

S3,228 

$2,172 

$1,056 


$3,354 

$2,963 

$391 

7,000 

7,000 

65 

47 

18 

65 














6,978 


2,449 

1,283 

$3,246 

6,968 

4,968 

2,000 

20,000 

20,000 

9 

6 

3 





9 







1 

307 

168 

139 

4,522 

$4,522 


4,522 

4,522 

0 ) 

(i) 

60 

37 

23 

27 


33 






3 

2 

1 

51 

25 

26 

11,601 

480 

2,411 

8,710 

5,714 

5,496 

218 

149,363 

143,363 

68 

68 






68 

49 

49 





49 

49 


22, 889 

22,455 


434 

21,872 

18,962 

2,910 

40,000 

40,000 

19 

14 

5 

8 


11 



598 

308 

290 

242 

113 

129 

48 

23 

25 

( 3 ) 

( 3 > 

( 3 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

(i) 

0 ) 

0 ) 



C 1 ) 









(i) 

0 ) 

(i) 

2,585 

56 

1,599 

930 

1,965 

1,781 

184 

4,100 

4,100 

100 

58 

42 

49 


51 



10 

6 

4 

(!) 

0 ) 

0 ) 

102 

49 

53 

6 , 454 

2,400 

1,998 

1,600 

456 

6,241 

5,241 

1,000 

85,000 

75,000 

o 

0 ) 

0 ) 

o 

0 ) 

(>> 

(*) 

0 ) 

0 ) 

0 ) 

( i ) 

0 ) 

0 ) 

(0 

(>) 

(■) 

0 ) 

(>) 

0 ) 

(>) 

(») 

0 ) 

0 ) 

0 ) 

(>) 

0 ) 

0 ) 

145 

73 

72 

145 











41 

23 

18 

5,769 

2,190 

2,219 

1,360 


5,483 

5,343 

140 

125,000 

125,000 

16 

13 

3 

9 


7 



6 

4 

2 

81 

46 

35 

15 

7 

8 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

106 

56 

50 

102 


4 



0 ) 

( i ) 

( i ) 




96 

40 

56 

8,903 

357 

2,946 

2,784 

2,816 

6,739 

5,530 

1,209 

53,000 

50,000 




















( 6 ) 

25 

11 

14 

21 

3 



1 

338 

166 

172 

68 

31 

37 

11 

5 

6 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 



( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

48 

o) 

(0 

( i ) 

0 ) 

0 ) 

(>) 

(*) 

520 

( 7 ) 

( i ) 

226 

(») 

(») 

4 

0 ) 

0 ) 

10,000 

10,000 



10,865 

10,865 

18,000 

18,000 

7 

7 


7 








8 

8 





8,062 


5,143 

1,359 

1,560 

8,062 

8,062 


45,000 

45,000 

65 

65 


65 








15 

15 


20 

20 

.... 

5.144 


'245 

1,049 

3,850 

5;m 

4; 541 

630 

70', 000 

7o;ooo 

92 


92 

92 





10 


10 

5 


5 

13 


13 

7,901 


1,175 

'755 

5^971 

22,071 

7', 071 

15,000 

30,000 

30,000 

74 

47 

27 

70 

4 




14 

9 

5 

1 


1 

9 


9 

4,465 

3,240 

445 

780 

6,911 

5,454 

1,457 

30,000 

30,000 

0 ) 

(») 

(») 

o 

C 1 ) 

( 7 ) 

( l ) 

(>) 

0 ) 

0 ) 

(>) 

o) 

0 ) 

0 ) 

(>) 

0 ) 

(•) 

0 ) 

o 

(>) 

(») 

0 ) 

0 ) 

o) 

0 ) 

0 ) 

(*) 

79 

m 


79 








• 37 

17 

20 




5,500 


3,000 


2,500 

5,402 

5,402 


93,000 

45,000 

17 

V. ) 

g 

V / 

8 

17 








1 

1 





2,019 


2,019 


1,718 

1,718 


25,000 

25,000 

99 

19 

10 

29 





1195 

CD 

(>) 

C 1 ) 

c) 

(>) 

3 

(l) 

0 ) 

17,754 

1,300 

16,354 


100 

17,676 

17,676 


42 

42 

28 


14 



2 

2 

13 

13 

11,842 


10,120 

522 

1,200 

11,842 

10,342 

1,500 

29,604 

29,604 

21 

21 

21 











7 


7 

0 ) 

C 1 ) 

0 ) 

0 ) 

( l ) 

0 ) 

( x ) 

( l ) 

C 1 ) 


917 

1 9 3 

94 

169 


4S 









77 

30 

41 

16,218 


12,436 

3,782 


13,891 

13,891 


100,000 

100,000 

175 

90 

85 

139 


36 



62 

27 

35 

11 

4 

7 

42 

IS 

24 

11,429 


8,720 

. 

2,573 

136 

10,158 

9,675 

483 

110,000 

110,000 

1 7 

19 

5 

11 



A 







(l) 

0 ) 

0 ) 

4,000 

4,00C 


3,592 

3,592 




90 


35 

90 











33 

22 

11 

18,990 

9,787 

3,243 

5,960 

15,016 

13,715 

1,301 

160,200 

48,000 

99 

33 

66 

79 


20 









0 ) 

C 1 ) 

( x ) 

7,221 


564 

694 

5,963 

8,031 

6,721 

1,310 

90,000 

90,000 

111 

111 

73 

5 

33 









25 

25 

9,091 


6,035 

1,596 

1,460 

8,416 

7,817 

599 

91,725 

61,725 

120 

55 

65 

91 


29 



40 

12 

28 

58 

20 

38 

43 

IS 

25 

10,967 


3,245 

7,722 


11,238 

11,238 


30,00C 

I # 

30,000 


& Auxiliary to National Benevolent Association of Christian Church. 7 Included in report of Children's Home Society of West Virginia. 

6 Included in report of Northwestern Home (Aged Department), Walla Walla. 


(H 

a> 


& 

a 

G 

a 

g 


o 


G 


1 
t—< 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 


1 

2 


3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 
























































































































































































































156 BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table I.—INSTITUTIONS FOR THE 





T3 


Ih 

C3 

9 

O 

CHILDREN RECEIVED FOR 
TIME IN 1910. 

FIRST 




> 

*s 

8 

CO 

CO 

jd 

2 

-+-S 




Through— 

Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of children received. 

Year founded. 

P 

o> 

u 

•0 

a 

& 

9 

U 

o 

O 

Number of cottag 

03 

co 

9 

9 

JO 

p< 

6 

9 

2 

GS 

Ph 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Public officials. 

Officials of the 

institution. 

Child-placing 

societies. 

Relatives or 

friends of child. 

Other agencies. 


Orphan and indigent boys.. 

Orphan and neglected boys. 

Dependent and neglected 
children. 

1874 

No. 



8 

8 





8 



1S45 

Yes. 


23 

87 

87 





87 



1886 

Yes. 

7 

57 

141 

73 

68 

141 










Norwegian Lutheran Synod. 

Orphan, homeless, neglected, 
and indigent children. 

1889 

No. 

.... 

10 

12 

7 

5 

3 

.... 

o 

7 

.... 

Private corporation _ 

Homeless children under 11 . 

1904 

Yes. 


8 

34 

17 

17 

15 



15 

4 

Metropolitan Church Asso¬ 
ciation. 

Orphan, neglected, and de¬ 
pendent children. 

1903 

No. 



<»> 

0) 

0) 



(*) 

(») 






United Danish Lutheran 

Oiphan children from 2 to 10. 

1899 

No. 


5 

1 

1 





1 


Church. 









County of Milwaukee.. 

Destitute children 

1898 

Yes. 

2 

22 

292 

178 

114 

292 





Lutheran Home Finding So¬ 
ciety of Wisconsin. 

Dependent, neglected, and 
abandoned children. 

1896 

No. 


6 

46 

30 

16 

10 



32 

4 






Protestant Episcopal Church 

Dependent and neglected 
children. 

1909 

No. 


3 

13 

9 

4 

4 



9 










& 

a 

D 

a 

a 

o 


11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 
17 


18 

19 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


WISCONSIN—Continued. 
Polonia: 

St. Clara’s Asylum. 

St. Francis: 

St. Aemilianus Orphan Asylum. 
Sparta: 

State Public School. 


Stoughton: 

Martin Luther Orphans’ Home. 


Superior: 

Children’s Home and Refuge... 
2002 Ohio Ave. 

Waukesha: 

Metropolitan Orphanage. 

Fountain Spring House. 
Waupaca: 

Bethany Orphans’ Home. 

Berlin St. 

Wauwatosa: 

Home for Dependent Children. 
Lutheran Children’s Home. 


WYOMING. 

Laramie: 

Cathedral Home for Children. 


1 Not reported. 





































































GENERAL TABLES 


157 


CARE OF CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


CHILDREN IN THE INSTITUTION AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 


o 


34 

148 

199 

73 

62 

( l ) 

25 


131 

17 


© 

*c3 

a 


13 


34 

148 

111 

43 

( l ) 

0) 

14 

86 


T3 
P . 
c3 w 
&0 

co P 

P = 

o 

t- ^ 

O 


Dependent. 


© 

O g 

■as* 

08 

> 

P 


31 
111 

88 88 

30 44 


C 1 ) 

C 1 ) 

11 


0) 

0) 

24 


7 

17 


8 


© 

,P 


0) 


2 

37 

107 

29 

0) 

0) 

1 

118 


Cm 

o 

w 

O 

,Q 

.9 

e* 

t-. 

o 


p 

© 

p 

cr 

.a 

© 

Q 


( l ) 


C 1 ) 


CHILDREN 
OUTSIDE BUT 
UNDER 
SUPERVISION. 


5 

751 


233 

309 


© 

*03 

a 


5 

500 


251 


129 

158 


CHILDREN 
PLACED IN 
FAMILIES 
DURING 
YEAR. 


104 

151 


5 

15 

209 


45 


5 

15 

125 


© 

a 

© 


29 


84 


16 


CHILDREN 
DISCHARGED 
DURING YEAR. 



© 

c8 

c3 

© 

a 

O 

<?3 

© 

H 

a 

Pm 

1 

i 


65 

65 

.... 

16 

10 

6 

11 

6 

5 

39 

0) 

0) 

« 

( i ) 

( i ) 

1 

.... 

1 

315 

190 

125 

5 

3 

2 

4 

3 

1 


RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 


Total. 


$966 

15,458 

80,235 

12,138 

4,375 

0) 

3,286 

39,4 

( 2 ) 

0) 


Derived from— 


Ap- 

pro- 

pria- 

tions. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 



$258 

$10,043 

78,606 



10,788 

1,125 

413 

0) 

(*) 

. 

2,492 

39,400 


( s ) 


( i > 


Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources 

$60 

$906 


5,157 


1,629 

1,327 

23 

2,115 

722 


0) 

444 

350 

( s ) 


C 1 ) 

(>) 


PAYMENTS DURING 
YEAR. 

VALUE OF 
PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

s2 

© 

Total. 

For 

run¬ 

ning 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total 

(includ¬ 

ing 

invested 

funds). 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

Institution numt 

$876 

$876 


$900 

$900 

11 

15,382 

15,382 


100,000 

85,000 

12 

80,235 

67,663 

$12,572 

193,031 

193,031 

13 

7,835 

7,002 

833 

36,800 

35,000 

14 

4,049 

4,049 


10,300 

10,300 

15 

(>) 

(*) 

(«) 

( i ) 

( i ) 

16 

2,864 

2,616 

248 

5,000 

5,000 

17 

41,816 

32,403 

9,413 

60,000 

60,000 

18 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

19 

C 1 ) 

0) 

0) 



1 


2 Included in report of Lutheran Children's Friend Society. 



























































































































Institution number. 


158 BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table II.— SOCIETIES FOR THE PROTECTION 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


ALABAMA. 


1 

2 


Birmingham: 

Birmingham Humane Society. 

2019 Avenue G (Ensley P. O.). 
Boys’ Club and Children’s Aid Society 
206 South Fifteenth St. 


ARKANSAS. 

Little Rock: 

1 Arkansas Humane Society. 

533 Southern Trust Building. 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 


6 


CALIFORNIA. 

Fresno: 

Fresno County Humane Society. 

905 S St. 

Los Angeles: 

Children’s Home Society of California. 

2414 Griffith Ave. 

Pasadena: 

Pasadena Humane Society. 

Room 5, City Hall. 

Riverside: 

Riverside County Humane Society. 

Chamber of Commerce. 

Sacramento: 

Sacramento Society for Prevention of Cruelty to 
Children. 5 
808 Tenth St. 

San Francisco: 

California Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to 
Children. 

11 Jones St. 

Children’s Agency. 

1500 Jackson St. 


COLORADO. 


1 

2 


1 

2 


1 


1 


1 


1 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 


Colorado Springs: 

El Paso County Humane Society.. 

City Hall (Police Department). 

Denver: 

Colorado Humane Society.. 

State House. 

CONNECTICUT. 

Hartford: 

Connecticut Children’s Aid Society. 

926 Main St. 

Connecticut Humane Society. 

55 Prospect St. 

DELAWARE. 

Wilmington: 

Delaware Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to 
Children. 

1 West Seventh St. 

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA. 
Washington: 

Board of Children’s Guardians. 

District Building, Fourteenth St. and Pennsyl¬ 
vania Ave. 

FLORIDA. 

Jacksonville: 

Children’s Home Society of Florida. 

2029 Main St. 


IDAnO. 


Boise: 

Children’s Home and Aid Society 
740 Warmspring Ave. 


ILLINOIS. 

Chicago: 

Illinois Children’s Home and Aid Society.. 

127 North Dearborn St. 

Jewish Home Finding Society of Chicago... 
720 West Twelfth St. 

Lutheran Home Finding Society of Illinois. 
4840 West Byron St. 

Quincy: 

Quincy Humane Society. 

211 Hampshire St. 

Whitehall: 

Whitehall Orphans’ Home Society. 


Year founded. 

Colored children received. 

NUMBER OF 
AGENTS. 

Number of receiving homes 

under control of society. 

Number of families in which 

children were placed. 

Paid. 

Voluntary. 

1910 

0) 

1 

1 


P) 

1903 

Y es... 

3 



34 

1886 

No.... 

2 41 



25 

1894 

No.... 

1 

105 


21 

1891 

Yes... 

P) 

P) 

2 

(') 

1903 

Yes... 

2 

18 

1 

7 

1897 

P) 

i 

1 



1896 





1876 

0) 

4 

1 


34 

1907 

Yes... 

4 


1 

(>) 

1896 

Yes... 

1 

6 

1 

4 

1881 

Yes... 

6 

7 1,119 



1892 

Yes... 

2 



41 

1880 

(') 

2 

312 



1878 

Yes 11 . 

i 


2 

24 

1892 

No.... 

10 



24 

18S3 

No.... 

1 



so 

1908 

Yes... 

5 


2 

87 

1883 

Yes... 

39 


2 

398 

1907 

No.... 

2 


0) 

105 

1906 

No.... 

1 

1 

1 

7 

18S0 

0) 

1 

30 

.... 

1 

1902 

No. 14 .. 

13 


1 

0) 1 


children placed during year. 


Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Orphans, half 

orphans, and 

foundlings. ® 

Invalid and de- g 

fective. 

Other homeless, P 

neglected, and 

indigent. 

Working boys and 

girls. 

Delinquent. 

In families. 

Temporarily in insti¬ 

tutions. 

Permanently in insti¬ 

tutions. 1 

9 

4 

5 



9 




9 


193 

159 

34 

22 

2 

46 

22 

101 

37 

23 

133 

46 

22 

24 

19 

i 

26 



46 



i 

42 

10 

32 



42 



21 

21 


259 

132 

127 

133 


126 



259 



8 

(0 

(') 

3 


4 


1 

7 

1 


3 

1 

2 



1 


2 


3 













P) 

0) 

0) 

P) 

o) 

P) 

P) 

P) 

P) 

464 


(!) 1 

(!) 

0) 

(») 

p) 

(*) 



(i) 

(1) 

(i) 

32 

19 

13 

18 


14 

4 

14 

14 

336 

(!) 

(i) 



295 


41 


236 

100 

152 

85 

67 

29 

27 

85 


11 

114 

10 

28 

81 

42 

39 



81 




81 


170 ! 

82 

88 

(>) 

P) 

P) 

P) 

P) 

34 


136 

320 

208 

112 

• 

86 

26 

119 


89 

24 

284 

12 

87 

(‘) 

(0 

(') 

(') 

0) 

P) 

(i) 

87 



125 

69 

56 

34 

1 

71 

19 

121 

4 


415 

224 

191 

165 


250 



398 


17 

115 

43 

72 

73 


42 



115 


7 

5 

2 

7 








8 

2 

6 

7 

1 




1 



108 

46 

62 

0) 


P) 



106 

2 



1 Not reported. 

2 Agents in 40 counties. 

3 Includes report of Victoria Home. 

4 Includes finances for protection of animals. 


5 Not in active operation. 

5 Includes amount supplied from general fund of Associated Charities. 
7 Includes agents for protection of animals. 

3 Included in receipts from “other sources.” 








































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


159 


AND CARE OF CHILDREN: 1910. 


CHILDREN UNDER CARE AT 

CLOSE OF TEAR. 

RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 

PAYMENTS DURING 

YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

In 

receiv¬ 

ing 

homes. 

In families— 

In 

cus¬ 

tody 

else¬ 

where. 

Total. 

Derived from 


Total. 

For run¬ 
ning ex¬ 
penses. 

For per¬ 
manent 
improve¬ 
ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

buildings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

Invested 

funds. 

With 

pay¬ 

ment 

of 

board. 

With¬ 

out 

pay¬ 

ment 

of 

board. 

Appro¬ 

priations. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Other 

sources. 

4 

1 

3 




4 

SI,068 

S3 00 


$768 

$945 

$945 





37 

33 

4 


3 

34 


5,648 

1,883 

$3,750 

15 

4,596 

4,596 


$1,248 


$1,248 

9 

5 

4 




9 

3,150 

500 

1,000 

1,650 

2,900 

2,900 



% 








1,418 

750 

668 


1,400 

1,400 





443 

240 

203 

25 


418 


3 28,851 

143 

6,438 

22,270 

3 28,993 

22,981 

$6,012 

3 40,132 

$9,200 

30,932 

1 


1 




1 

4 3,072 


3,072 

4 2,714 

2,714 











100 


100 

83 

83 






















(1) 


01 

(l) 

(!) 

(i) 

(1) 

2,581 


2,366 

215 

6,123 

6,123 


(i) 

(') 


437 

209 

228 

25 

233 

179 

54,325 

33,828 

s 12,148 

8,349 

57,309 

57,309 


(>) 

(i) 

(•) 

C) 

(*) 

(*) 

<*) 

(*) 

(>) 

0) 

2,483 

1,100 

1,297 

86 

2,044 

2,044 


1,150 

1,150 









4 9,831 

7,800 

(8) 

» 2,031 

4 9,674 

9,674 





254 

118 

136 


41 

104 

109 

is.31,650 

9,483 

15,272 

6,895 

io 29,680 

25,873 

3,807 

io 61,900 

60,500 

1 400 








13,551 

2,000 

1,100 

10,451 

14,126 

14,126 


135,706 

23,750 

111,956 


* 






1,158 

978 

20 

160 

1,429 

1,429 







«;oi 


154 

008 

12 5QQ 

72 928 

70,710 


2,218 

63,911 

63,911 






m 

m 

m 

o) 

(>) 

0) 

7,199 

7,199 

7,047 

7,047 






v 1 ; 

V / 

\ / 







zo 

31 

21 

44 

5 

3 


49,300 

22,050 

27,250 


48,500 

7,652 

40,848 

74,400 

73,400 

1,000 

1,501 

798 

703 

62 

5 

1,424 

10 

is 63,953 

3,420 

56,650 

3,883 

13 67,794 

56,522 

11,272 

13 86,980 

86,980 


50 




49 



13 923 


13 Q23 


13,169 

13,169 





Ju 

0 

Q 

9 



2,251 


1,621 

630 

2,115 

2,115 


5,600 

4,300 

1,300 

26 

4 

22 




26 

1,014 



1,014 

807 

754 

53 

21,800 

14,000 

7,800 

332 

185 

147 

9 


m 

is 323 

w18,828 


IS, 742 

86 

ii 12,650 

12,650 


> 7 5,600 

1 2,250 

3,350 


1 

2 


1 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 
7 


1 

2 


1 

2 


1 


1 


1 


1 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 


«Includes donations. 

10 Includes report of Virginia T. Smith Home for Crippled and Incurable 
Children, at Newington, Conn. 

n in one of the two receiving homes. 

13 Including 197self-supporting. 


13 Includes report of Receiving Homes, at Evanston and Duquoin, Ill. 
HThe society finds homes for them, 
is Included in column ‘ ‘In custody elsewhere. ” 

16 Includes those in families without payment of board. 

17 Includes report of Receiving Home. 


Institution number. 










































































































































Institution number. 


160 BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table II.— SOCIETIES FOR THE PROTECTION 


10 

n 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 
21 
22 

23 

24 

25 

26 


31 

32 

33 

1 

2 

1 

2 


NAME AND LOCATION. 

73 

© 

73 

d 

0 

£ 

U 

c3 

© 

73 

© 

> 

*© 

a 

9 

d 

0 

C 

2 

2 

o 

73 

© 

o 

2 

o 

NUMBER OF 
AGENTS. 

Number of receiving homes 

under control o f society. 

Number of families in which 

children were placed. 



CHILDREN 

PLACED DURING 

YEAR. 



T3 

•a 

pH 

>> 

o3 

d 

0 

2 

> 

1 

2 

4-P 

o 

© 

2 

a 

© 

2 

a 

© 

Dependent. 

73 

0 

c3 

in 

‘So 

w> 

0 

a 

I* 

o 

£ 

-*-a 

fl 

© 

£3 

© 

p 

GO 

© 

a 

a 

03 

d 

HH 

1 

m 

0 

r~j 

•»h xn 

'§3 

S3 

o 

ft 

a 

O’ 

Eh 

1 

CO 

O 

d 

,pH CO 

37 § 

S3 

S ^ 

c3 

a 

S-t 

© 

^73 

-C c3 • 

CO 

•sC/i S3 

co d£d 

d 

c3^3 cl 

o 

i 

© 

7d 

73 • 

§> 
•-d 
73 o 
•3 <d 
c3 
> 

0 

co £3 
® c3 

©~T . 

a 

’“-< © b f. 

<D b/j'C 

X) § O 
o 

INDIANA. 


















Bedford: 


















Lawrence County Board of Children’s Guardians.... 

1907 

(>) 




1 

12 

2 

10 

0) 

0 

0 

0 

0 

1 

11 


Bloomfield: 
















Greene County Board of Children’s Guardians. 

1907 

No 

1 




2 

1 

1 

2 






2 


Bloomington: 

















Monroe County Board of Children’s Guardians. 

1905 

No 





15 

9 

6 



15 



7 

8 


Brook ville: 
















Franklin County Board of Children’s Guardians.... 

0 

No 




5 

5 

2 

3 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

5 



Columbus: 














Bartholomew County Board of Children’s Guardians. 

189S 

No.... 




9 

31 

13 

18 

12 

2 

12 


5 

9 

16 

6 

Decatur: 


















Adams County Board of Children’s Guardians. 

1906 

No 




2 

2 


2 

0 

0 

0 

0) 

0 

2 



303 North Third St. 












Evansville: 


















Vanderburgh County Board of Children’s Guardians. 

1900 

No . 

1 


1 

33 

44 

18 

26 



38 


6 

33 

2 

9 

507 Lincoln Ave. 


















Fort Wayne: 


















Allen County Board of Children’s Guardians. 

1901 

No 




13 

22 

8 

14 

1 


21 



13 

9 


Lutheran Children’s Friend Society of Indiana and 

1902 

No 


i 


15 

15 

11 

4 

14 

1 




15 



Ohio. 














2322 Broadway. 


















Fowler: 


















Benton County Board of Children’s Guardians. 

1906 

No 





2 


2 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 


2 


Greenfield: 














Hancock County Board of Children’s Guardians. 

1905 

Yes 





6 

3 

3 

3 


3 




6 


237 North Main St. 


















Greensburg: 


















Decatur County Board of Children’s Guardians. 

1901 

m 

1 




2 

2 


1 


1 




2 


Huntington: 


















Huntington County Board of Children’s Guardians.. 

1894 

Yes . 




5 

25 

8 

17 

15 


10 



5 

15 

5 

409 North Jefferson St. 


















Indianapolis: 


















Children’s Home Society of Indiana 3 . 

1893 


4 


1 

189 

200 

103 

97 

55 

3 

140 


2 

195 


5 

77 Baldwin Building, 152 East Market St. 












German Lutheran Orphans’ Association. 

1883 

No 



1 

21 

22 

14 

8 

21 

i 




21 

1 


3310 East Washington St. 


















Marion County Board of Children’s Guardians. 

1889 

No 

2 


1 

41 

51 

26 

25 



51 



41 

10 


1718 Broadway. 

















Lafayette: 


















Tippecanoe County Board of Children’s Guardians... 

1906 


1 

1 


4 

9 

0 

3 

6 


3 



5 

4 


40 Court House St. 
















Laporte: 


















Laporte County Board of Children’s Guardians. 

1900 

Yes 





11 

6 

5 



11 





11 

Liberty: 


















Union County Board of Children’s Guardians. 

1910 

« 





3 

1 

2 

3 






3 


Logansport: 

















Cass County Board of Children’s Guardians. 

1907 

0 




0 

27 

11 

16 

5 




22 

22 

5 


Martinsville: 















Morgan County Board of Children’s Guardians. 

0 

Yes 




5 

16 

8 

8 

16 





5 

11 


Mount Vernon: 

















Posey County Board of Children’s Guardians. 

1910 





99 

38 

19 

19 

29 

i 

1 


7 

19 

17 

2 

Muncie: 


















Delaware County Board of Children’s Guardians.... 

1901 

Yes . 

i 




25 

19 

6 



25 




25 


Noblesville: 


















Hamilton County Board of Children’s Guardians. 

1904 

0 





6 

3 

3 

1 


5 




6 


Princeton: 

















Gibson County Board of Children’s Guardians. 

1909 

No.... 




( l ) 

31 

23 

8 

19 

3 

8 


1 

26 

2 

3 

Richmond: 

















Wayne County Board of Children’s Guardians. 

1905 

Yes.. 




12 

37 

23 

14 

0 

0 

0 



12 

14 

11 

Scottsburg: 















Scott County Board of Children’s Guardians. 

1908 

No 




5 

8 

9 

6 

6 




2 

6 

2 


Seymour: 


















Jackson County Board of Children’s Guardians. 

1907 





8 

8 

3 

5 


8 




8 



Terre Haute: 


















Vigo County Board of Children’s Guardians. 

1893 

Yes 



i 1 

90 

119 

56 

63 


9 

110 



100 

10 

9 

Court House. 


















Tipton: 


• 
















Tipton County Board of Children’s Guardians. 

1905 

0 





4 

2 

2 

2 



2 



4 


Versailles: 

















Ripley County Board of Children’s Guardians. 

1909 

No 




4 

4 

2 

2 

4 





4 



Vincennes: 


















Knox County Board of Children’s Guardians. 

1902 

0) 




56 

91 

42 

49 

0 

0 

0 

0) 

0 

56 

2 

33 

Wlnamac: 












Pulaski County Board of Children’s Guardians. 

1909 

( l ) 


1 



3 

2 

1 

3 







3 

IOWA. 

















Des Moines: 


















Iowa Children’s Home Society. 

1S88 

Yes 

7 


1 

359 

410 

196 

214 

150 


260 



396 

7 

7 

2340 East Ninth St. 


















Ottumwa: 


















American Home Finding Association. 

1899 


6 


1 

146 

147 

75 

72 


147 




146 


1 

507 West Fourth St.~ 

















KANSAS. 


















McPherson: 


















Child Rescue and Orphan Society of the Church of 

1908 

0) 

i 



33 

37 

17 

20 

26 


11 



33 

4 


the Brethren. 

















Topeka: 


















Kansas Children’s Home Society. 

1894 

Yes... 



1 

169 

169 

80 

89 

169 





169 



614 Kansas Ave. 



















i Not reported. 


2 Includes report of Receiving Home. 


3 Includes report of Hadley Home, at Hadley, Ind. 





































































































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


161 


AND CARE OF CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


CHILDREN UNDER CARE AT 

CLOSE 

OF YEAR. 

RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 

PAYMENTS DURING 

YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 

j Institution number. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

In 

receiv¬ 

ing 

homes. 

In families— 

In 

cus¬ 

tody 

else¬ 

where. 

Total. 

Derived from— 

Total. 

For run¬ 
ning ex¬ 
penses. 

For per¬ 
manent 
improve¬ 
ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

buildings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

Invested 

funds. 

With 

pay¬ 

ment 

of 

board. 

With¬ 

out 

pay¬ 

ment 

of 

board. 

Appro¬ 

priations. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Other 

sources. 

5 


5 



1 

4 

( l ) 

( l ) 

0 ) 

c i ) 

$40 

$40 





1 

( l ) 

0 ) 

0 ) 

0 ) 

0 ) 

0 ) 

( l ) 

$500 

$500 

100 

100 





2 

0 ) 

(') 

o) 

0 ) 

0 ) 

0 ) 

0 ) 

( l ) 

( i > 

0 ) 

o) 

( i ) 

(■) 





3 

0 ) 

( 1 ) 

0 ) 

0 ) 

0 ) 

0 ) 

0 ) 

600 

600 



600 

600 





4 

8 

3 

5 

8 

100 

100 


* 

100 

100 





5 

(i) 


0 ) 

(i) 

0 ) 

0 ) 

( l ) 











6 

169 

77 

92 

31 

138 

2 5,500 

5,500 



2 5,500 

5,500 


2 $30,000 

$30,000 


7 








600 

600 



600 

600 




8 

6 

3 

3 


6 



825 


$825 


333 

333 





9 

3 


3 



3 










10 

7 

5 

2 




7 











11 

m 

i 

(i\ 


0 ) 

0 ) 



75 

75 



40 

40 





12 

v / 

9 

5 

4 

V ) 

6 

v ) 

3 








13 

653 

344 

309 

51 

12 

584 

6 

20,782 

8,319 

8,054 

$4,409 

21,000 

18,000 

$3,000 

6,000 

6,000 


14 

79 

40 

39 

48 


31 


( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 > 

0 ) 

0 ) 

(<) 

15 

72 

46 

26 

59 


12 


5 7 389 

7 258 

131 


& 7,432 

6,707 

725 




16 

72 

33 

39 


32 

40 

500 

500 


191 

191 





17 




50 

50 



50 

50 





18 








20 

20 



20 

20 





19 

27 

11 

16 



22 

5 











20 















21 








100 

100 



100 

100 





22 








342 

342 



342 

342 





23 








25 

25 









24 

37 

22 

/i\ 

is 



17 

20 











25 

/i\ 

/■i\ 

/n 

n\ 

m 

0 ) 

o) 



(■> 

(•) 





26 

( l ) 

(V 

C 1 ; 


\ l ) 

\ ) 

\ ) 








8 

/i\ 

9 

A 



A 

2 











27 


n\ 

m 

n\ 

m 

n\ 











28 

C 1 ) 

v 1 ; 


\) 

V ) 

\ ) 













99 

66 

33 

99 




2 000 

2,000 









21 














30 


Q 

9 



* 












31 

0 

(>> 

O 

/i \ 

/i\ 

n\ 

si\ 

n\ 











32 

( x ) 



CD 

t ) 



















l 

50 

50 



50 

50 





33 

l 

30 

i 

23 

7 

27 



3 

2 28,423 

2,147 

16,169 

10,107 

2 28,335 

27,791 

544 

2 65,000 

25,000 

$40,000 

1 

22 

12 

10 

22 




2 19,310 

200 

17,610 

1,500 

2 18,851 

12,681 

6,170 

2 32,000 

32,000 


2 





i 


1 194 


1,194 


1,156 

1,156 





1 

1 

0) 

i 





12 886 


12,457 

429 

12,886 

12,886 





2 

826 

(v 



540 













< included in report of German Lutheran Orphans’ Home. 6 Includes report of Guardians’ Home, Indianapolis, Iud. 


11 


44153°—14- 













































































































































Institution number. 


162 BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table II.— SOCIETIES FOR THE PROTECTION 





NUMBER OF 
AGENTS. 

co 

© 

a . 

43 

© 

3 



CHILDREN 

PLACED DURING 

YEAR. 






T3 


siS 















© 

> 

*© 

© 



W}3 
c o 

VZ 

a © 

—* ^ 
co rv 
© ^ 




Dependent. 

T3 

d 

03 



CO 

a 

• 

co 

a 






•g* o 

© 










• rH 

•—H 

NAME AND LOCATION. 

© 

a 

D 

a 

u 

03 

© 

>< 

a 

© 

3 

© 

© 

£ 

3 

o 

■o 

•a 

CL 

>> 

fa 

03 

d 

d 

3 

> 

&3 

g u 
d 

O O 

fa* © 

!! 

d 

£ 

1 * 

^ a 

<~c ® 
°'C 

0 1 

3 

£ 

■3 

O 

3 

3 

s 

3 

3 

0 

© 

S-a 

2 ° 

03 w 

^ co d 
co d;d 

d 

034 : a 
43 Q*d 
fa< o «*-. 

O 

1 

© 

TJ 

T3 • 

g ® 
•■S 

“ © 

> 

d 

HH 

cn-g 

m C 
® as 

f—t 

© n-T 

a l0 

■a g & 

.a a> a 

O 

CO 

>> 

ii 

fa* 

bJO 

a 

2 

fai 

O 

£ 

■fai 

d 

© 

d 

a 

© 

P 

GO 

3 

1 

**-* 

a 

»H 

a . 

CO 

*§ 

•c'g 

o 

P< 

0 

® 

a 

CO 

£?§ 

ce 

a 

© 

0h 

KANSAS—Continued. 


















Wichita: 


















Christian Service League of America. 

1907 

o) 

3 



54 

88 

42 

46 

16 


71 


i 

88 



113 North Law. (Box 615.) 









KENTUCKY. 


















Louisville: 


















Kentucky Children’s Home Society 2 . 


















1086 Baxter Ave. 


















Kentucky Home Society for Colored Children 3 . 


















807 Sixth St. 


















MAINE. 


















Portland: 


















Children’s Protective Society of Portland. 

1903 

Yes 


i 


275 

297 

176 

121 

10 


287 



275 

21 

i 

85 Market St. 








Maine Children’s Committee. 

1909 

No.... 

1 



68 

60 

28 

32 

(>) 

0) 

0) 

(') 

(■) 

60 



City Building. 






MARYLAND. 


















Baltimore: 


















Henrv Watson Children’s Aid Society. 

1860 

Yes... 

15 



164 

240 

149 

91 

93 


147 



240 



15 East Pleasant St. 








Maryland Society to Protect Children from Cruelty 
and Immorality. 

1878 

Yes... 

4 



(0 

305 

156 

149 



305 



100 

31 

174 









636 West Franklin St. 


















MASSACHUSETTS. 


















Boston: 


















Boston Children’s Aid Society . 

1864 

Yes... 

22 

66 


355 

439 

248 

191 

20 

13 

307 

2 

97 

439 



43 Hawkins St. 





Boston Children’s Friend Society. 

1833 

(*) 

6 



92 

168 

79 

89 

96 

9 

53 


10 

156 

12 


48 Rutland St. 








Boston North End Mission. 

1867 

Yes... 

ii 


i 

20 

27 

13 

14 

18 


9 



27 



313 Ford Building. 







Boston Society for the Care of Girls. 

1800 

Yes... 

7 

5 


196 

208 


208 

101 

5 

79 


23 

201 

5 

2 

184 Boylston St. 









Catholic Charitable Bureau . 

1903 

Yes... 

2 

ii 


54 

172 

103 

69 

(>) 


0) 



116 

56 


43 Fremont St. 







Children’s Mission to the Children of the Destitute.. 

1849 

Yes... 

9 



147 

132 

85 

47 

65 

6 

60 


1 

132 



279 Tremont St. 







Lowell: 


















Lowell Humane Society. 

1872 

( l ) 

1 



0) 

57 

34 

23 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

(>) 

9 

18 

30 

71 Central St. 





New Bedford: 


















New Bedford Children’s Aid Society. 

1843 

No.... 

2 



45 

53 

26 

27 

13 

1 

36 

1 

2 

52 

1 


12 Market St. 






Springfield: 


















Hampden County Children’s Aid Association. 

1879 

Yes... 

2 



43 

81 

34 

47 

4 

2 

73 


2 

50 

25 

6 

5'Court House Place. 








Worcester: 


















Worcester Children’s Friend Society. 

1849 

0) 

4 



50 

147 

68 

79 

64 

7 

64 

7 

5 

147 



390 Main St. 









MICHIGAN. 


















Bay City: 


















Lutheran Children’s Friend Society. 

1899 

No.... 



i 

21 

21 

12 

9 

4 


17 



21 



1215 Tenth St. 











Detroit: 


















Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children.. 
606 Breitmeyer Building. 

1898 

Yes... 

5 


i 

172 

511 

250 

261 

C 1 ) 

0) 

(>) 

(*) 

0) 

172 

339 





St. Joseph: 


















Michigan Children’s Home Society. 

1891 

Yes... 

9 


i 

120 

120 

65 

55 

6 

3 

111 



120 



1424 South State St. 








MINNESOTA. 


















Alexandria: 


















Douglas County Humane Society. 

1904 

0) 


16 



1 


1 

1 






1 


Duluth: 












Duluth Humane Society. 

1892 

(') 

3 




81 

41 

40 

15 

13 

37 

7 

9 


60 

21 

207 Court House Building. 







Minneapolis: 







\ 











Minneapolis Humane Society. 

1891 

0) 

5 



9 

185 

76 

109 

185 





9 

130 

46 

Court House. 









St. Paul: 


















Children’s Home Society of Minnesota. 

1889 

Yes... 

4 



109 

105 

57 

48 

28 


75 


2 

103 


2 

2239 Commonwealth Ave. 










Lutheran Children’s Friend Society of Minnesota... 
2022 Marshall Ave. (Merriam Park.) 

1901 

No.... 

4 


i 

40 

40 

22 

18 

27 


12 


1 

40 










St. Paul’s Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to 
Children. 

1878 

i 1 ) 

1 



0) 

51 

22 

29 

32 

9 

2 


8 

24 

23 

4 







Old Capitol. 


















Winona: 


















W inona County Humane Society. 

0) 

Yes... 

1 



1 

6 

2 

4 

1 


5 



2 


4 

476 West Fifth St. 















1 Not reported. 

2 Included in report of Receiving Home. 

3 Included in report of Receiving Home for Colored Children. 
< Included in report of Mount Hope Home. 
















































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


163 


AND CARE OF CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 

• 


Derived from 


Total. 





Appro- 

Dona- 

Other 


priations. 

tions. 

sources. 

*7,717 

*150 

*906 

*6,661 





3,606 

3,500 

55 

51 

859 


259 

600 

18,233 

1,000 

7,595 

9,638 

3,733 

500 

3,069 

164 

52,892 


23,054 

29,838 

25,964 


14,537 

11,427 

1,175 



1,175 

49,056 


66 

48,990 

5,130 



5,130 

•61,462 


•32,800 

28,662 

1,411 


771 

640 

9,427 


863 

8,564 

4,857 


1,350 

3,507 

28,939 


16,448 

12,491 

2 1,500 


1,500 


6,602 


6,022 

580 

>25,191 

460 

22,818 

1,913 

12 


12 


2,158 

1,560 

598 


9, .589 

4,067 


5,522 

16,311 


14,966 

1,345 

4,717 



4,717 

3,189 

1,500 

1,586 

103 

485 

360 

125 



CHILDREN UNDER CARE AT CLOSE OF TEAR. 


Total. 


80 


Male. 


38 


Fe¬ 

male. 


In 

receiv¬ 
ing 

homes. 


42 


With 

pay¬ 

ment 

of 

board. 


In families— 


With¬ 

out 

pay¬ 

ment 

of 

board. 


14 


60 


In 

cus¬ 

tody 

else¬ 

where. 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 


Total. 


*8,412 


For run¬ 
ning ex¬ 
penses. 


*6,126 


For per¬ 
manent 
improve¬ 
ments. 


*2,286 


VALUE OF PROPERTY AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 


Total. 


*4,300 


Land, 

buildings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 


Invested 

funds. 


*4,300 


1 

2 

1 

2 

1 

2 


1 

2 

3 

4 
6 
6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

1 

2 

3 

1 

2 


4 

5 

6 


219 

0) 

728 

81 


249 

142 

115 

164 

94 

183 


46 

112 

90 

75 

1,119 

417 


(*) 

(«) 


19 

102 


131 

0) 

468 

30 


145 

63 

69 


67 

93 


26 

38 

41 

43 

618 

223 


0) 

0) 

14 

57 


88 

0) 

260 

51 


104 

79 

46 

164 

27 

90 


33 


52 

(>) 

63 

13 


170 

64 

3 

103 

94 

154 


146 

0) 

665 

15 


78 
34 

79 
46 


23 


20 

74 

49 

32 

501 

194 


35 

5 

71 


13 

105 

34 


80 

28 


0) 

(>) 

5 

45 


0) 


35 

(>) 


9 

102 

18 

62 

92 

350 


(*) 

(>) 


97 


21 

0) 


53 


1 

44 


15 


842 

5 


( l ) 

(>) 

19 


3,475 

859 


18,233 

5,037 


55,071 
19,883 
1,175 
25,775 
5,130 
<>36,046 

1,420 

8,543 

2,476 

15,809 

2 1,400 
7,602 
7 25,980 

26 

2,077 

9,411 

15,717 
4,717 
3,184 

485 


3,300 

859 


18,233 

5,037 


55,071 
19,874 
1,175 
25,775 
5,130 
•35,981 

1,420 

8,543 

2,476 

15,809 

1,400 

6,602 

25,980 

26 

2,077 

9,411 

15,717 

4,629 

3,184 

485 


175 


65 


1,000 


88 


s includes legacy of *27,155 to permanent fund. 

“ Includes cost of aid given children in their own homes. 

Includes report of Receiving Home and cost of aid given children in their own homes. 


175 


175 


100,550 

2,225 


203,500 

138,550 

( 4 ) 

489,057 


489,134 
14,001 
156,337 
28,372 
142,000 

• 2,000 
9,000 
2 23,000 

110 


75,370 

8,000 


550 

1,225 


23,500 

37,000 

( 4 ) 


*100,000 

1,000 


180,000 

101,550 

( 4 ) 

489,057 


145,400 


2,193 


343,734 

14,001 

154,144 

28,372 

142,000 


2,000 

9,000 

20,000 


3,000 


no 


40,000 

8,000 


35,370 


Institution number. 




















































































































































Institution number. 


164 BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table II.— SOCIETIES FOR THE PROTECTION 


5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


MISSOURI. 

St. Joseph: 

Humane Society of St. Joseph and Buchanan County. 
Seventh and Messani Sts. 

St. Louis: 

Children’s Home Society of Missouri. 

4427 Margaretta Ave. 

Humane Society of Missouri 3 . 

520 Olive St. 

Lutheran Society for Homeless Children of Missouri.. 
1704 Market St. 

St. Louis Children’s Aid Society. 

1832 Carr St. 


MONTANA. 

Helena: 

Montana Children’s Home Society. 
Helena Ave. and Warren St. 

NEBRASKA. 

Omaha: 

Nebraska Children’s Home Society. 
514 Browp Block. 


NEW HAMPSHIRE. 

Keene: 

Keene Humane Society. 

Exchange Block, Main St. 

Nashua: 

New Hampshire Woman’s Humane Society. 

Crom Hill. 

Portsmouth: 

New Hampshire Society for the Prevention of 
Cruelty to Children. 


NEW JERSEY. 

Camden: 

Camden County Society for the Prevention of 
Cruelty to Children. 

725 Federal St. 

Elizabeth: 

Elizabeth Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to 
Children. 4 

Room 25, Court House. 

Hackensack: 

Children’s Aid and Society for the Prevention of 
Cruelty to Children. 3 
79 Essex St. 

Hoboken: 

United Aid Society and Society for the Prevention of 
Cruelty to Children. 

1 Newark St. 

Jersey City: 

New Jersey State Board of Children’s Guardians. 

15 Exchange Place. 

Morristown: 

Morris County Society for the Prevention of Cruelty 
to Children. 

21 Morris St. 

Speedwell Society. 

Newark: 

Catholic Children’s Aid Association of New Jersey.... 
13 Central Ave. 

Children’s Aid and Society for the Prevention of 
Cruelty to Children. 

249 Mulberry St. 

Orange: 

Children’s Aid and Protective Society of the Oranges. 
124 Essex Ave. 

Paterson: 

Passaic County Children’s Aid and Society for the 
Prevention of Cruelty to Children. 

848 Market St. 

Trenton: 

New Jersey Children’s Home Society. 

Room 44, Forst-Richey Building. 

NEW MEXICO. 

Albuquerque: 

Children’s Home Society of New Mexico and Arizona. 
805 East Grand Ave. 


NEW YORK. 

Albany: 

Mohawk and Hudson River Humane Society. 
80 Howard St. 

Batavia: 

Batavia Humane Society. 

17 Ross St. 


• -3 


a 

o> 


■3 

0 

3 

O 


1890 

1891 
1870 
1903 
1909 

1896 

1893 

1875 
1907 

1876 

1889 

1898 

1900 

1906 

1899 

1898 

1902 

1903 
1868 

1899 
1879 

1894 

1906 

1887 

1903 


-3 


"3 

3 


o 

O 


No... 

No... 
Yes.. 
No... 
0) 

Yes... 

Yes... 


(*) 

Yes. 

P) 


NUMBER OF 
AGENTS. 


■3 

"9 

P- 


Yes... 

(*) 

Yes... 

No.... 

Yes... 

(*) 

Yes... 

Yes... 

(■) 


Yes...|'o 15 
0) 


Yes.. 


Yes... 3 


No.... 


No.. 


>> 

(H 

c3 

+» 

d 

d 

•—H 
»> 


10 


20 


14 


118 
. 2 


a> 

a 

d 4—* 
© 

d ° 


d 
•fi? o 

O O 

Si 

£3 

a s 


— © 
G 5 


32 

a ~ 


Si 


1 a 

OJ 

O j- 


(») 

0) 

13 

25 

45 


61 

45 

2 

9 

12 


14 

80 

15 

25 

292 

79 

0) 

17 

202 

50 

(>) 

3 


CHILDREN PLACED DURING YEAR. 


o 

Eh 


48 

179 

101 

29 

36 

66 

39 

26 

23 

32 


52 


50 

156 

36 

187 

548 

96 

6 

23 

170 

50 

1.374 

5 


d 

3 


35 

93 

61 

13 
10 

29 

14 

9 

10 

9 


23 


0) 

93 

20 

( l ) 

288 

50 

(>) 

12 

95 

23 

(') 


© 

a 

© 


73 "§ 
si as L 
„t>6 
. c n C 

a 93 

OS'S 
03 si 0 
si Po 
PiEo 
u. O v. 

O 


13 

86 

40 

16 

26 

37 

25 

17 

13 

23 


29 


0) 

63 

16 

C 1 ) 

260 

46 

0) 

11 

75 

27 

0) 

3 


Dependent. 


0) 

0) 

0) 

24 

36 


66 

10 

7 

23 


37 


11 

59 

19 

( l ) 

118 

25 

0) 


54 


39 


( l ) 


& 

'O 

i? 

■31 

OS 

> 

a 


(■) 

(>) 

(») 


1 

5 

( l ) 


(') 


( l ) 


r- 

o <p 
< X > tL 


(») 

0) 

( i ) 


29 


12 


32 


16 

91 

4 

( l ) 

363 

46 

0) 

20 

116 

11 

(«) 


*i 

•So 

to 

a 

a * 


(•) 

0) 

( i > 


5 

(*) 


(«) 


(«) 


a 

OJ 

a 

»§* 

% 


C 1 ) 

0) 

0) 


& 

a 


16 

5 

3 

( l ) 

67 

10 

(') 


0) 


48 

179 

13 

25 

30 

66 

39 

2 

9 

12 


11 

a 

a 

£> 

Eh 


50 

156 

15 

187 

292 

79 

4 

17 

170 

50 

46 

3 


1 Not reported. 

3 Includes report of Receiving Home. 
3 Both animal and child protection. 


* Affiliated with Charity Organization Society. 

3 Includes finances of Charity Organization Society. 

6 Included in report of Bergen County Children’s Home. 


55 

4 

2 


24 

8 

20 


28 


256 


C/1 

i?§ 

a* 

§ 3 


33 


17 


21 


17 


980 348 
2 






























































































































GENERAL TABLES 


165 


AND CARE OF CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


CHILDREN UNDER CARE AT CLOSE OF TEAR. 


Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

In 

receiv¬ 

ing 

homes. 

In fam 

With 

pay¬ 

ment 

of 

board. 

ilies— 

With¬ 

out 

pay¬ 

ment 

of 

board. 

In 

cus¬ 

tody 

else¬ 

where. 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

(0 

0) 

(■) 

211 

110 

101 

32 


179 


18 

6 

12 



9 

9 

9 

7 

2 




9 

20 

5 

15 


7 

12 

1 

3 

1 

2 




3 

3 


3 


3 



35 

12 

23 




35 

6 

4 

2 



6 









3 

i 

2 



3 


4 

3 

1 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

97 

(») 

( l ) 

75 

14 

8 


852 

565 

287 


401 

426 

25 

15 

8 

7 


3 

12 


25 

o 

( l ) 

(’) 

(') 

0) 

(') 

1 550 

834 

716 



730 

820 

107 

53 

54 

28 


79 


14 

7 

7 



14 


199 

109 

90 

29 


9 

161 

763 

509 

254 

50 

13 

700 


178 

100 

78 

10 



168 

iq 

7 

6 

13 




0) 

(*> 

0) 

t 1 ) 

0) 

0) 

0) 


RECEIPTS DURING TEAR. 


Total. 


$1,537 

2 21,981 
7,983 
827 
1,258 


13,637 

10,326 

1,421 

0) 


296 


6 4,508 


Derived from- 


Appro- 

priations. 


$2,647 
340 


(') 


0 ) 


Dona¬ 

tions. 


$1,537 

16,486 

4,604 

827 

1,164 


6,737 


(') 


187 


296 


4,508 


Other 

sources. 


$2,848 

3,039 


94 


6,900 


0) 


1,234 


PATMENTS DURING TEAR. 


Total. 


$1,436 

2 21,927 
7,749 
649 
624 


13,640 

9,835 

1,436 

0) 


297 


6 4,433 


For run¬ 
ning ex¬ 
penses. 


$1,436 

20,982 

4,811 

649 

624 


5,631 

(0 

1,436 

0) 


297 


4,433 


For per¬ 
manent 
improve¬ 
ments. 


$945 

2,938 


8,009 


(') 


VALUE OF PROPERTT AT CLOSE 
OF TEAR. 


Total. 


2 $53,500 
16,500 


18,000 


2,000 


2,046 


Land, 

buildings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 


$50,000 


18,000 


Invested 

funds. 


$3,500 

16,500 


2,000 


2,046 


1,839 

51,008 
» 1,594 
(■) 

6,128 

2,850 

2,467 

8 5,261 

9 25,566 

10,500 

« 12,615 
(') 


250 


50,779 


637 


2,984 

0) 


1,492 

(>) 

976 

1,595 

2,467 

5,261 

22,881 

5,500 

3,989 

(>) 


952 

229 

102 

(') 

5,152 
1,255 


2,685 

5,000 

5,642 

0) 


4,384 

44,673 

i 1,586 

7,347 

5,761 

4,685 

2,461 
8 5,137 

9 25,604 

10,500 

H 12,109 

0) 


3,037 

44,673 

1,586 

7,347 

5,761 

3,518* 

2,461 

5,015 

25,604 

5,500 

12,109 

C 1 ) 


1,347 


9,500 


6,500 

3,000 

0) 

(>) 


1,167 


( l ) 

40,000 


25,000 


122 


5,000 


0) 


8 14,000 

9 29,641 

10,000 

ii 108,152 

0) 


14,000 

18,500 

10,000 

100,000 
0) 


7 Includes finances for prevention of cruelty to animals. 

8 Includes report of Children’s Home. 

8 Includes report of McKinley Receiving Home. 


1° Includes agents for protection of animals. 

ii Includes report of Albany and Troy Receiving Homes. 


(») 

15,000 


11,141 


8,152 

0 ) 


5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 


Institution number 





































































































































166 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table II.— SOCIETIES FOR THE PROTECTION 






NUMBER OF 
AGENTS. 

CA 

<X> 

a . 

2 >> 

£3 

o 

3 



CHILDREN 

PLACED DURING 

YEAR. 







*3 



£3 4-3 

"'d 














<D 

> 

*53 



.5 ° 

O o 
•-< £ 




Dependent. 

T3 

a 



1 

tn 

1 

<x> 



§ 



Ho 











a 

fl 



















a 

3 

a 

a 

o 

n 

3 

*43 

m 

a 

b-t 

NAME AND LOCATION 

Year founded. 

3 

<D 

U> 

2 

3 

o 

TJ 

a> 

u 

o 

3 

o 

Paid. 

Voluntary. 

Number of rec 

under control 

rt © 

o£ 

Ui 

f 

z 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Orphans, half 

orphans, and 

foundlings. 

Invalid and de¬ 

fective. 

Other homeless, 

neglected, and 

indigent. 

Working boys 

girls. 

Delinquent. 

In families. 

Temporarily in 

tutions. 

Permanently in 

tutions. 


NEW YORK—Continued. 



















Binghamton: 


















3 

Broome County Humane Society. 

1902 

c) 

3 

8 

(*) 

32 

128 

84 

44 

64 


64 



32 


96 


Municipal Building. 







Brooklyn. 2 

Buffalo: 


















4 

Luthem Children’s Friend Society of New York_ 

480 Glenwood Ave. 

1905 

No.... 

1 



8 

10 

8 

2 

5 


5 



8 


2 













5 

Queen City Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to 
Children. 

1879 

Yes... 

4 


1 

(>) 

49 

( l ) 

<») 

(») 

(>) 

0) 

(*) 

(') 

0) 

( l ) 

( l ) 






62 Delaware Ave. 



















Cooperstown: 


















6 

Otsego County Society for the Prevention of Cruelty 
to Children. 

1903 

( l ) 


1 



10 

5 

5 

3 







10 















Geneva: 


















7 

John Mackay Society for the Prevention of Cruelty 
to Children. 

1905 

No.... 

0) 

( l ) 

1 

1 

8 

5 

3 

1 


7 



1 

7 













764 South Main St. 



















Gouverneur: 


















8 

St. Lawrence County Society for the Prevention of 
Cruelty to Children. 

1898 

<*> 


1 


3 

7 

2 

5 



3 


4 

3 


4 
















Hornell: 


















9 

Hornellsville Society for the Prevention of Cruelty 
to Children. 

1903 

0) 


1 



1 


1 

1 







1 

















Jamestown: 


















10 

Chautauqua County Society for the Prevention of 
Cruelty to Children. 

1897 

(*) 


22 


1 

15 


8 



12 


3 

1 

14 












New York City: 



















Bronx and Manhattan Boroughs — 


















11 

Catholic Home Bureau for Dependent Children 

1898 

Yes... 

8 



262 

262 

139 

123 

262 





262 



105 East Twenty-second St. 









12 

Children’s Aid Society (Placing Out Department).. 
105 East Twenty-second St. 

1854 

Yes... 

12 


7 

725 

735 

643 

92 

364 



371 


735 






2,703 


259 

2,546 

13 

New York Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to 
Children. 

1874 

(») 

24 

18 

2,823 

1,963 

860 

120 


18 







297 Fourth Ave. 


















14 

State Charities Aid Association. 

1872 

( l ) 

8 



210 

185 

77 

108 

107 

2 

76 



181 

3 

1 

105 East Twenty-second St. 

Brooklyn Borough — 

Brooklyn Children’s Aid Society. 



















15 

1866 

Yes... 

12 


1 

147 

471 

274 

197 

218 


233 

20 


407 

32 

32 

72 Schermerhorn St. 

Brooklyn Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to 
Children. 


1 

5 

1,172 

16 

1880 

Yes... 

43 

(*) 

1,849 

1,520 

329 


672 


328 


1,521 







103 Schermerhorn St. 


















17 

Roman Catholic Orphan Asylum Society in the 
City of Brooklyn. 

1826 

Yes... 

* 230 


4 

<*) 

114 

49 

65 

114 





95 

19 










4 Court Square. 



















Norwich: 


















18 

Chenango County Humane Society. 

1906 

( l ) 


30 


1 

22 

9 

13 

14 

(') 

(») 



5 

12 

5 

Municipal Building. 








Olean: 


















19 

Olean Society for the Prevention ofCruelty to Children. 
Oswego: 

1903 

0) 


3 



5 

4 

1 

3 

2 





3 

2 
















20 

Oswego County Society for the Prevention of Cruelty 

1885 

Yes... 

1 

5 

.... 

10 

12 

7 

5 

5 


3 


4 

10 

2 



to Children. 



















119 West First St. 



















Rochester: 


















21 

Children’s Aid Society of Rochester.... 

1895 

No.... 

3 



87 

130 

76 

54 

32 


98 



130 



409 Livingston Building. 









22 

Rochester Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to 
Children. 

1875 

Yes. 

2 


i 

6 

107 

65 

42 



58 


49 

6 

101 




% 







90 Plymouth Ave., north. 



















Rome: 


















23 

Rome Branch, Stevens-Swan Humane Society_ 

City Hall. 

1900 

(*) 

1 



10 

29 

14 

15 

18 


11 



19 


10 









Seneca Falls: 


















24 

Seneca County Society for the Prevention of Cruelty 
to Children. 

1903 

0) 

1 



3 

3 

2 

1 

1 


2 



3 


















Syracuse: 


















25 

Syracuse Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to 
Children. 

1881 

( l ) 

4 



(>) 

173 

80 

93 

9 


164 



15 

158 










3 Clinton Block. 



















Utica: 


















26 

Utica Branch, Stevens-Swan Humane Societv... 

(>) 

(») 

1 



11 

22 

11 

•11 



22 



15 

7 


County Building. 

Watertown: 

Jefferson County Society for the Prevention of 
Cruelty to Children. 


i 







27 

1883 

( l ) 

1 

50 

47 

(») 

(*) 

47 

47 









224 Massey Ave. 



















Yonkers: 


















28 

Westchester County Society for the Prevention of 
Cruelty to Children. 

1882 

( l ) 

2 



(>) 

19 

11 

8 

0) 

0) 

( l ) 

( l ) 

( l ) 

19 









45 Warburton Ave. 



















NORTH CAROLINA. 



















Greensboro: 


















1 

North Carolina Children’s Home Society. 

1903 

(>) 

4 



98 

95 

44 

51 

81 

2 

12 


.1 

93 


2 


1 Not reported. 2 See New York City. 3 Includes report of Receiving Home. 


















































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


167 


AND CARE OF CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


CHILDREN UNDER CARE AT 

CLOSE 

OF YEAR. 

-,— 

RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 

PAYMENTS DURING 

YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

In 

receiv¬ 

ing 

homes. 

In famihes— 

In 

cus¬ 

tody 

else¬ 

where. 

Total. 

Derived from 


Total. 

For run¬ 
ning ex¬ 
penses. 

For per¬ 
manent 
improve¬ 
ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

buildings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

Invested 

funds. 

With 

pay¬ 

ment 

of 

board. 

With¬ 

out 

pay¬ 

ment 

of 

board. 

Appro¬ 

priations. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Other 

sources. 



















(!) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

$4,084 

$1,841 

$1,161 

$1,082 

$4,278 

$4,278 


$1,200 

$1,200 


3 

1 

1 

1 

961 

961 

396 

396 



4 








4,628 

3,500 

582 

546 

3,734 

3,734 


12,500 


$12,500 

5 











6 

8 

5 

3 

3 


1 

4 

561 


561 


330 

330 


0) 

0) 

0) 

7 

o) 

0) 

0) 

( i > 

0) 

( l ) 

0) 

19 


19 


7 

7 


8 











9 

11 

7 

4 


1 


10 

(il 


(11 

(il 







10 

1,481 

875 

606 


1 448 


33 

18 260 

13,183 

4,384 

693 

14,923 

14,923 





11 

151 

93 

58 

116 

8 


27 

48 105 

1,103 

16,430 

30,572 

48,105 

48,105 


159,982 


159,982 

12 

68 

40 

28 

0) 

0) 

0) 

c) 

116,995 

60,000 

39,176 

17,819 

118,245 

118,245 


290,478 

214,391 

76,087 

13 

592 

251 

341 


11 

578 

3 

15,368 


14,735 

633 

15,852 

15,852 


0) 

C 1 ) 

0) 

14 

281 

168 

113 

16 

214 

42 

9 

42,191 

18,004 

7,252 

16,935 

41,902 

41,902 


331,213 

70,913 

260,300 

15 

61 

37 

24 

36 


25 


3 43,494 

20,000 

11,887 

11,607 

3 43,150 

43,150 


3 258,650 

135,000 

123,650 

16 

1 970 

1,310 

660 

1 875 


95 


5 296,259 

196,394 

58,081 

41,784 

5 306,713 

283,495 

$23,218 

5 1,918,116 

1,918,116 


17 







393 

300 

93 

263 

263 




18 

m 

HI 

m 

m 



Gl 

40 


40 


40 

40 





19 

\ ) 

\ ) 

W 

\ / 

\ J 

VV 

\ J 











04 

20 

14 



1 

90 

300 


300 


300 

300 





20 

9Q7 

170 

19 A 


1 AO 

1Q1 

9 

19 338 

18 504 


834 

19,243 

19,243 


4,270 

4,270 


21 

19 

A 

A 

A 


Q 


3 741 

3,671 

62 

8 

3,811 

3,811 


10,000 

10,000 


22 

Q 

K 

A 


o 

7 


142 

107 

35 

252 

252 





23 








100 

100 



100 

100 





24 








2,932 

800 

2,132 


2,919 

2,919 


300 

300 


25 








1,466 


1,316 

150 

1,261 

1,261 


100 


100 

26 


/'ll 

m 

50 




0) 


1,062 

0) 

0) 

( l ) 

0) 

8,000 

8,000 


27 

23 

V 7 

13 

V / 

10 

0) 

( l ) 

C 1 ) 

(!) 

3,600 

1,750 

1,850 

3,651 

3,651 


47,800 


47,800 

28 

i 3 

1 

2 




3 

7,847 


7,838 

9 

7,232 

7,232 


2,725 

2,500 

225 

1 


4 Includes sisters, teachers, and lay help for all institutions under care of society. 5 Includes finances for all institutions under care of society. 















































































































































Institution number. 


168 BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table II.— SOCIETIES FOR THE PROTECTION 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 

9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

1 

2 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


NORTH DAKOTA. 

Fargo: 

North Dakota Children’s Home Society. 

804 Tenth St., south. 

OHIO. 

Akron: 

Akron Humane Society. 

Mill and Main Sts. 

Barberton: 

Barberton Humane Society. 

lllj Tus Ave. 

Cincinnati: 

Ohio Humane Society. 

24 East N inth Ave. 

Cleveland: 

Cleveland Humane Society. 

406 City Hall. 

Columbus: 

Children’s Home Society of Ohio. 

34 West First Ave. 

Lima: 

Allen County Humane Society. 

520 South Pine St. 

Mansfield: 

Mansfield Humane Society. 

Massillon: 

Massillon (Stark County) Humane Society. 

309 Chestnut. 

Norwalk: 

Huron County Humane Society. 

Oxford 

Oxford Humane Society. 

Port Clinton: 

Ottawa County Humane Society. 

Ravenna: 

Portage County Humane Society. 

Sandusky: 

Erie County Humane Society 2 . 

223 Decatur St. 

Springfield: 

Springfield and Clark County Humane Society. 

18 East Main St. 

Van Wert: 

Van Wert County Humane Society. 

101£ East Main St. 

Youngstown: 

Youngstown Humane Society. 

705 Dollar Bank Building. 

OKLAHOMA. 

Oklahoma City: 

Oklahoma Children’s Home Society. 

1539 West Twenty-fourth St. 

Stillwater: 

Child Saving Mission of Church of the Brethren of 
Oklahoma. 

602 West Tenth St. 

OREGON. 

Portland: 

Boys’ and Girls’ Aid Society of Oregon.. 

East Twenty-ninth and Irving Sts. 

PENNSYLVANIA. 

Beaver Falls: 

Beaver Valley Humane Society. 

Butler: 

Butler County Branch Children’s Aid Society of 
Western Pennsylvania. 

Clearfield: 

Clearfield County Branch Children’s Aid Society of 
Western Pennsylvania. 

Corry: 

Corry Humane Society... 

Doylestown: 

Bucks County Children’s Aid Society. 

Emporium: 

Cameron County Branch Children’s Aid Society of 
Western Pennsylvania. 

Erie: 

Northwestern Pennsylvania Humane Society. 

1218 Holland St- 
Huntingdon: 

Juniata Valley Children’s Aid Society. 

Eighteenth and Moore Sts. 


T3 

03 

T3 

a 

3 

O 


1890 


1900 

1902 
1870 
1873 
1893 
1910 

1884 
1870 

1897 

1903 
1902 

1885 

1886 

1872 

1902 

1895 


1900 


1902 


1885 

1905 

1887 

0) 

1898 

1884 

1892 

1892 

1881 


•a 

a 

> 


a 

£ 

•v 

H 

3 

o 

T) 

® 


O 

O 


Yes... 

P) 

Yes... 
Yes... 
Yes... 
Yes... 

P) 

Yes... 

Yes... 

P) 

P) 

P> 

P) 

Yes... 

P) 

P) 

0) 

Yes... 

No.... 

Yes... 

0) 

0) 

w 

(>) 

Yes... 

0) 

P) 

Yes... 


number of 

AGENTS. 


■a 

*03 

P-i 


P) 


a 

a 

3 

> 


88 


10 

P) 

P) 

3 

11 

P) 


2 >> 
JS +? 


CfO 

G ° 


G 

—< o 
t. qj 

3 a 

3 


1 


CO Q. 

33 ® 

773 t- 

P 

G 

o 

•d 

t- t-* 

a> 'G 


0) 


P) 


51 


72 


(>) 


23 


0) 

23 

383 

10 

8 

16 

4 

19 

9 

0) 

22 


CHILDREN PLACED DURING YEAR. 


o 

Eh 


62 

71 

14 

334 

118 

82 

5 

8 

10 

29 
1 

10 

4 

5 

28 

23 

30 

74 

23 

421 

10 
7 10 

7 16 

13 

14 
7 9 

35 

26 


3 

S 


35 

P) 

8 

P) 

60 

44 

3 

3 

1 

P) 


5 
4 
3 

14 

12 

18 

36 

15 

207 

6 
6 

6 

8 

8 

2 

23 

16 


c3 G 
A c3 


a> 

rt 

a 

<x> 


„ CO 

co C3 

X3 Qi 
CL 

£7 o 
O 


27 

P) 

6 

( 7< ) 

58 

38 

2 

5 

9 

P) 

1 

5 


2 

14 

11 

12 

38 

8 

214 

4 

4 

10 

5 

6 
7 

12 

10 


Dependent. 


61 


13 


6 

11 

63 

4 

8 

9 

P) 


P) 


175 

10 
7 5 

7 16 

6 
5 
7 9 

P) 

26 


• 

G ® 
C3 > 

•Sly 

> 

G 


P) 

21 


P) 


1 Not reported. 

2 Includes report of Receiving Home. 

3 The society acts as an agent for the families assisted, incurring no expense on its own account. 
* Exclusive of $54,091 paid in for support of minor children. 


5j d 

® 03 
03 - 

— ® bt 

§•303 

.3 © 2 
• d.2 


58 

7 

222 

106 

10 

1 


P) 


21 

20 

30 

P) 


164 


7 5 


P) 


JS.S 


a 


P) 


P) 


a 

a 4 

a 


7 

99 


P) 


73 


P) 


61 

6 

7 

82 

51 

82 


5 

23 

14 

8 

74 

23 

383 

10 
7 10 

7 16 

9 
13 
7 9 

9 

23 


II 

o 

Pi 

a 

03 


65 

7 

203 

66 


8 

4 

22 

1 

4 

‘4 


38 


11 


49 

1 


22 


15 

3 


Permanently in insti¬ 

tutions. 




















































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


169 


AND CARE OF CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


CHILDREN UNDER CARE AT 

CLOSE 

OF TEAR. 

RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 

PAYMENTS DURING 

YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

In 

receiv¬ 

ing 

homes. 

In families— 

In 

cus¬ 

tody 

else¬ 

where. 

Total. 

Derived from— 

Total. 

For run¬ 
ning ex¬ 
penses. 

For per¬ 
manent 
improve¬ 
ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

buildings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

Invested 

funds. 

With 

pay¬ 

ment 

of 

board. 

With¬ 

out 

pay¬ 

ment 

of 

board. 

Appro¬ 

priations. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Other 

sources. 

360 

120 

240 

19 


341 


7 814,544 


$11,099 

$3,445 

7 $16,295 

$12,205 

$4,090 

2 $26,790 

$22,390 

$4,400 

1 

33 

(i) 

(*) 




33 

695 

8695 

525 

525 

1 

9 

4 

5 



2 

7 

(») 


( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 6 ) 





2 








4 15^187 

2 250 

4 409 

R 728 

4 7 ,220 

6 835 

385 

29,067 

20,050 

9,017 

3 

345 

192 

153 

14 

3 

328 


6 17,626 

11,000 

4,757 

1,869 

5 16,636 

16,636 

3 19,500 

8,000 

11,500 

4 

31 

22 

9 

31 




6,102 


6,102 


6,033 

6,033 



5 




1 




655 

490 

165 

625 

625 

• 




6 

4 


4 


1 


3 

500 

300 


200 

480 

480 





7 

3 


3 


1 

2 


540 

540 



315 

315 





8 

29 

(*) 

(i) 



7 

22 

315 


6 

309 

315 

315 





9 

1 

1 


1 



51 


51 


45 

45 





10 

6 

6 




6 


150 


150 








11 


















12 

22 

8 

14 

22 




969 

887 

23 

59 

698 

698 


2,385 


2,385 

13 








727 

720 


7 

787 

787 



14 

5 

2 

3 



5 


565 

540 


25 

568 

568 





15 

0) 

0) 

0) 

(>) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

806 

600 

19 

187 

1,137 

1,137 





16 

15 

(1) 

(1) 

(') 

(>) 

(1) 

(') 

5,107 

472 

4,221 

414 

5,053 

5,053 


12,000 

12,000 


1 

H 

9 

2 

11 

1,025 


830 

195 

1,090 

1,090 



2 

636 

282 

354 

58 


558 

20 

• 14,201 

4,885 

1,826 

7,490 

«15,871 

14,453 

1,418 

• 133,150 

83,000 

50,150 

1 


m 

(1\ 


1 


3 

300 


300 


300 

300 





1 

7 22 

V/ 

11 

H 


7 15 

7 7 


(’) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 


( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 


2 

7 20 

6 

24 



7 16 

7 14 

c 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 


( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 


3 

1 

1 




i 

115 

20 

95 

96 

96 



4 





20 

30 

i 

1 849 

1,799 

50 


1,800 

1,800 





5 

7 13 

7 

6 


7 13 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

6 

(») 

0) 

(*) 

0) 

(») 

0) 

0) 

1,619 

300 

185 

1,134 

1,129 

1,129 





7 

93 

59 

34 

18 

1 

71 

3 

2,764 

1,902 

598 

264 

3,050 

2,750 

300 

14,570 

12,000 

2,570 

8 


5 Includes report of Infants’ Rest and work of prevention of cruelty to animals. 

6 Includes report of Boys’ and Girls’ Aid Society Home. 

i Included in report of Children’s Aid Society of Western Pennsylvania. 






























































































































170 BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table II.— SOCIETIES FOR THE PROTECTION 


.O 

s 


c 

O 


9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 
17 


18 

19 

20 

21 

22 


23 


24 

25 


1 


1 


1 


1 

2 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

« 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


PENNSYLVANIA—Continued. 

Kennett Square: 

Chester County Children’s Aid Society. 

Kittanning: 

Armstrong County Branch Children’s Aid Society 
of Western Pennsylvania. 

Lock Haven: 

Clinton County Branch Children’s Aid Society of 
Western Pennsylvania. 

Media: 

Delaware County Children’s Aid Society. 

Norristown: 

Montgomery County Children’s Aid Society. 

Oil City: 

Venango County Branch Children's Aid Society of 
Western Pennsylvania. 

Philadelphla: 

Children’s Aid Society of Pennsylvania. 

1506 Arch St. 

Juvenile Aid Society. 

516 North Fourth St. 

Pennsylvania Society to Protect Children from 
Cruelty. 

415 South Fifteenth. 

Pittsburgh: 

Children’s Aid Society of Western Pennsylvania 3 ... 
43 Fernando St. 

Children’s Home Society of Pennsylvania 4 . 

719 Ferguson Building. 

Western Pennsylvania Humane Society. 

440 Sixth Ave. 

Scranton: 

Associated Charities of Scranton. 

332 Washington Ave. 

Somerset: 

Somerset County Branch Children’s Aid Society of 
Western Pennsylvania. 

Warren: 

Warren County Branch Children’s Aid Society of 
Western Pennsylvania. 

Washington: 

Washington County Branch Children’s Aid Society 
of Western Pennsylvania. 

Williamsport: 

Lycoming County Children’s Aid Society. 

Sheridan St. and Pennsylvania Ave. 

RHODE ISLAND. 

Providence: 

Rhode Island Society for the Prevention of Cruelty 
to Children. 

55 Eddy St. 

SOUTH CAROLINA. 

Greenville: 

South Carolina Children’s Home Society. 


SOUTH DAKOTA. 

Sioux Falls: 

South Dakota Children’s Home Society. 
Tenth and Sherman Ave. 


TENNESSEE. 

Chattanooga: 

Lewis Mission. 

322 Market St. 

Nashville: 

Humane Commission of Nashville. 
85 Arcade. 


TEXAS. 

Fort Worth: 

Texas Children’s Home and Aid Society.. 
Polytechnic Heights. 

Galveston: 

Galveston Humane Society 6 . 

Society for the Help of Homeless Children. 
1019 Avenue K. 

Houston: 

Harris County Humane Society. 

Fannin St. and Congress Ave. 

Paris: 

Bureau of United Charities. 

Twenty-second St. and Pine Bluff. 
San Antonio: 

San Antonio Humane Society. 

324 Hicks Building. 


© 

'O 

a 

a 

o 


1884 
1887 

1908 

1906 

1885 
1887 

1882 

1900 

1877 

1885 

1894 

1874 

1893 

1892 
1879 
1889 

1909 

1882 

1906 

1893 

1885 

1909 

1896 


1900 

1894 


1910 

1900 

1901 


■o 

© 

> 


a 

9 


a 

o 

■3 

© 


Yes. 

( l ) 

No.. 


0 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

No.. 

Yes. 


Yes... 
No.... 
0 

Yes... 

0) 
Yes. 
0 
Yes. 


Yes... 


No.... 


Yes... 


Yes. 
No.... 


0 


No.,.. 

No.... 

No... 

Yes... 


NUMBER OF 
AGENTS. 


•3 

PH 


52 

3 
16 

2 

6 

4 


0) 


0 


H 

o3 

S3 

X 

'o 

> 


t 1 ) 

( l ) 


15 

0) 


24 


25 


0) 

0) 

0 


( l ) 


a . 

R C/1 


S3 

S3 

3 


5 1 


& 

O 

a 

rl ^ 

£ O 

ja 


O) 




II 

■“ 3 

<D 

31 
s- ; 
© 'p 

-0’S 


32 

6 

15 

3 

14 

11 

478 

0) 

0 

0) 

' 86 

0) 

66 

20 

28 

12 

16 

22 

28 

134 


19 


145 


1 

5 

7 

17 


c3 

O 

r“ 


35 
2 7 

2 45 

3 
44 
2 21 

480 

87 

738 

927 

82 

133 

’273 

2 22 

2 40 

2 20 

16 

122 

28 

139 

23 

121 

165 


34 

20 

14 

49 


1 Not reported. 

2 Included in report of Children’s Aid Society of Western Pennsylvania. 


CHILDREN PLACED DURING YEAR. 


Male. 

Female. 

Orphans, half 

orphans, and H 

foundlings. jy 

oende 

I 

<D 

'd 

"d • 

S| 

03 

a 

Other homeless, g. 

neglected, and 

indigent. 

Working boys and 

girls. 

Delinquent. 

In families. 


Temporarily in insti¬ 

tutions. 

Permanently in insti¬ 

tutions. 

18 

17 

6 

4 

15 


10 

32 


3 

2 

5 

0) 

« 

0) 

0) 

0 

2 7 



19 

26 

2 21 


2 24 



2 45 



3 



3 




3 



30 

14 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 


42 


2 

12 

9 

2 10 


2 11 



2 21 



275 

205 

243 


62 


175 

478 

1 

1 

69 

18 

10 

5 

72 



65 

5 

17 

400 

338 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0 

503 

54 

181 

nS 

(l) 

875 


52 



805 


122 

39 

43 

31 

1 

50 



82 



0) 

0 

0) 

( l ) 

0) 

0 

0 

84 

17 

32 

141 

132 





273 

76 

197 


13 

9 

2 20 


2 2 



2 22 



36 

4 

2 40 





2 28 


2 12 

10 

10 

2 10 


3 10 



2 20 



11 

5 

2 


12 


2 

16 



53 

69 



122 



27 

6 

89 

16 

12 

28 





28 



63 

76 



139 



138 


1 

14 

9 

0 

0) 

C 1 ) 

0 

0) 



23 


87 

34 

19 




102 

19 

102 


0) 

0 

( l ) 

C 1 ) 

0 

0 

0 

165 



10 

24 



34 





33 



13 

12 


6 


2 



15 


8 

6 

4 

1 

9 




7 


7 

15 

34 

0 

C 1 ) 

( l ) 

0 

0 

18 

31 



3 Includes report of 23 county branches. 

4 Includes report of Receiving Home. 









































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


171 


AND CARE OF CHILDREN: 1910-Continued. 


CHILDREN UNDER CARE AT CLOSE OF YEAR. 


Total. 


178 
s 7 

2 31 

11 
50 
J 42 

1,657 

65 

3,316 

927 

809 

( l ) 

22 
7 70 
2 64 

* 35 
17 

611 


75 


19 


Male. 


Fe¬ 

male. 


I11 

receiv¬ 
ing 

homes. 


In families- 


With 
pay¬ 
ment 
of 
board. 


121 


0) 


103 

3 

15 

0) 

( l ) 

22 

1,004 

(') 

0) 

0) 

354 

( l ) 

17 

0) 

53 

15 

10 

274 

44 

10 


87 


(>) 


75 

4 

16 

0) 

0) 

20 

653 

0) 

( l ) 

( l ) 

455 

« 

5 

0) 

11 

20 

7 

337 

31 


34 


0) 


109 

( l ) 

22 


17 


19 


(') 


41 


29 

4 

42 


With¬ 

out 

pay¬ 

ment 

of 

board. 


534 

65 

177 

127 


0 ). 


2 70 
2 24 


0) 


In 

cus¬ 

tody 

else¬ 

where. 


137 

27 

2 12 

5 

8 

2 29 
938 


2 10 

2 


213 

185 


929 


678 


0) 


2 28 
2 31 


192 


2.210 

122 

700 

( l ) 


212 

2 4 


411 


19 


0) 


102 


0) 


RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 


Total. 


$3,960 

(*) 

(*> 

483 

2,021 

( 2 ) 

99,178 
10,271 
68,466 

23,563 
9,205 
6,943 

3,388 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

3,500 

« 17,149 

4,665 

♦ 14,152 

1,050 

1,798 

3,000 


Derived from— 


Appro¬ 

priations. 


Dona¬ 

tions. 


$3,410 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

413 

1,847 

( 2 ) 

40,258 
1,960 
3,750 

8,986 


2,000 

3,000 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


3,625 


400 

1,798 


$500 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


Other 

sources. 


6 

174 

( 2 ) 

22,521 
318 
8,514 

6,810 
6,992 
2,982 

388 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

3,500 

1,726 

4,665 

13,422 

326 


3,000 


$50 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


64 


( 2 ) 

36,399 
7,993 
56,202 

7,767 

2,213 

1,961 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


11,798 


730 


324 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 


Total. 


$3,960 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

458 

2,024 

( 2 ) 

98,506 

63,022 

26,573 
9,502 
6,923 

5,287 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

4,000 

< 9,499 

4.665 

4 16, 714 

1,075 

1,798 

4,000 


For run¬ 
ning ex¬ 
penses. 


For per¬ 
manent 
improve¬ 
ments. 


$3,960 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

458 

2,024 

( 2 ) 

98,506 

( l ) 

62,990 

26,573 
8,025 
6,923 

5,287 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

4,000 

9,306 

4,665 

11,087 

1,075 

1,798 

4,000 


VALUE OF PROPERTY AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 


( l ) 


$32 


1,477 


193 


5,627 


Total. 


Land, 

buildings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 


( 2 ) 

( s ) 


$3,250 

( 2 ) 

92,604 


288,686 

10,000 

34,681 


1,200 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

1,000 

< 77,100 

1,000 

455,000 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


Invested 

funds. 


$3,000 

( 2 ) 


78,765 

10.000 

3,000 


1,200 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

1.000 

25,000 

1,000 

45,000 


$250 


92,004 

209,921 


31,681 


52,100 


10,000 


9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 

21 

22 

23 

24 

25 


4 

5 

6 


32 


0) 


0) 


31 


0) 


0) 


0) 


0) 


0) 


(') 


0) 


7 2,060 
1,208 
1,350 
2,228 


300 

375 

600 


760 


4 General offices and temporary lodging. 


1,000 
833 
750 

2,228 

6 Temporarily discontinued. 


7 2,833 
1,208 
1,439 
2,063 


2,833 

1,208 

1,439 

2,063 


7 11,000 


10,000 


1,000 


7 Includes report of Home for Homeless Children. 














































































































































































172 BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table II.— SOCIETIES FOR THE PROTECTION 


$ 

X! 


3 

c 

_o 

3 

ft 

co 

a 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


VIRGINIA. 

Noefolk: 

Norfolk Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to 
Children. 

139 Cumberland St. 

Richmond: 

Children’s Home Society of Virginia. 

2605 East Franklin St. 

WASHINGTON. 

Seattle: 

Washington Children’s Home Society. 

Sixty-fifth and Jones Sts. 

WEST VIRGINIA. 

Charleston: 

Children’s Home Society of West Virginia. 

1118 Washington St. 

WISCONSIN. 

Milwaukee: 

Badger State Humane Society. 

72 Sentinel Building. 

Children’s Home Society of Wisconsin. 

204 Grand Ave. 

Oshkosh: 

Winnebago County Branch, Wisconsin Humane 
Society. 

61 Merritt St. 

Superior: 

Douglas County Humane Society. 

Wausau: 

Wausau Branch, Wisconsin Humane Society. 

814 Second St. 

Wauwatosa: 

Lutheran Children’s Friend Society. 


S3 

a 

3 

a 

u 

03 


1904 

1900 

1897 

1896 

1906 

1892 

1879 

1909 

1898 

1896 


ft 

03 


O 

O 


No.... 

No.... 

Yes... 

No.... 

<*) 

No.... 

0) 

No.... 

Yes... 


No.... 


NUMBER OF 
AGENTS. 


ft 

•a 

Pn 


11 


2 

16 


o 

> 


« 


m 

© 

a 

2 >> 
Q> 
bio’o 

a o 

•pH 

1° 

r j -T 


. 3 

£ O 
O o 


p 
a p 

p 


& 

v 

3 

p o 

CO r Q. 
«D ^ 

P3 j- 
3 


34 


175 


355 


115 


188 

32 

10 

3 

52 


o 

Eh 


51 

193 

536 

72 

79 

179 

35 

30 

37 

52 


CHILDREN PLACED DURING TEAR. 


a> 


13 

92 

278 

48 

57 

83 

12 

19 

25 

34 


03 

I 

03 

Ph 


38 

101 

258 

24 

22 

96 

23 

11 

12 

18 


Dependent. 


ftft 
g 3 fl 

co 3 

co oa 
3 gft 
2-9 3 

■H 

ph%o 


17 


137 


156 


38 

136 

32 


0) 

40 


ft 

ft • 
3 ® 

> 

fl 


to P 
3 C3 
o r- . 

2 o o> 
O two 

£72/3 

a»c 

P ‘r-t 

o 


16 


(») 

(*) 


-§J3 




33 

56 

379 

69 

9 

43 


0) 

C 1 ) 

12 


3 

O' 

3 

ft 


0) 

(!) 


16 


(>) 

0) 


34 


189 


530 


71 


179 

32 

4 

3 

52 


£>o 

' c m 

o 

ft 

a 

03 

Eh 


63 


15 

24 




i?§ 

II 

C ^ 
03 

a 


17 


16 


11 

10 


1 Not reported, 


2 Includes reports of Seattle and Spokane Receiving Homes. 














































































GENERAL TABLES 


173 


AND CARE OF CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


CHILDREN UNDER CARE AT 

CLOSE 

OF YEAR. 

RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 

PAYMENTS DURING 

YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

In 

receiv¬ 

ing 

homes. 

In families— 

In 

cus¬ 

tody 

else¬ 

where. 

Total. 

Derived from— 

Total. 

For run¬ 
ning ex¬ 
penses. 

For per¬ 
manent 
improve¬ 
ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

buildings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

Invested 

funds. 

With 

pay¬ 

ment 

of 

board. 

With¬ 

out 

pay¬ 

ment 

of 

board. 

Appro¬ 

priations. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Other 

sources. 

18 

3 

15 

7 

2 

1 

8 

$4,356 

$1,500 

$2,856 


$5,157 

$4,176 

$981 

$5,600 

$5,600 


1 

547 

258 

289 

24 


523 


9,582 

9,582 


9,415 

9,415 


15,000 

15,000 


2 

1,152 

615 

537 

35 

226 

824 

67 

2 31,811 

4,870 

23,990 

$2,951 

2 31,811 

29,811 

2,000 

2 40,400 

40,000 

$400 

1 

557 

286 

271 

25 


300 

232 

3 8,492 

63 

8,429 


3 8,586 

8,437 

149 

3 35,000 

35,000 


1 

0) 

0) 

0) 


0) 

( i ) 

0) 

2,000 


2,000 


2,000 

2,000 



1 

32 

19 

13 

22 

10 

22,800 


22,800 


22,800 

22,800 


2,000 

2,000 


2 

14 

4 

10 


7 


7 

975 

600 

375 


975 

700 

275 


3 

6 

4 

2 


0) 

o 

0) 

674 

550 

5 

119 

641 

641 





4 

26 

21 

5 

6 

6 

14 

150 

150 



65 

65 





5 

, 324 

i 

169 

155 

17 


307 


4 7,608 


6,435 

1,173 

4 5,356 

4,336 

1,020 

4 14,254 

12,000 

2,254 

6 


3 Includes report of Davis Child's Shelter. 4 Includes report of Receiving Home. 



/ 



















































































Institution number. 


174 BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table III.—HOMES FOR THE CARE OF ADULTS 


5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 


4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


ALABAMA. 

Birmingham: 

Mercy Home. 

2130 Eleventh Ave. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

109 South Twentieth St. 

Salvation Army Rescue Home.,. 

Thirty-third St. and Avenue E. 
Cullman: 

Alabama Odd Fellows’ Home. 

R. D. 5. 

Mobile: 

Benevolent Home. 

993 Government St. 

Colored Old Folks and Orphans’ Home .. 
Springfield Ave. and Mobile St. 

Home for the Aged. 

Monterey St. 

Martha Home. 

Adams St. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

400 St. Louis Ave. 

Montgomery: 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

317 Whitman St. 

Mountain Creek: 

Confederate Soldiers’ Home of Alabama.. 
ARIZONA. 

Phoenix: 

Florence Crittenton Home. 

Prescott: 

Home for Aged and Infirm Pioneers#. 

ARKANSAS. 

Batesvtlle: 

Odd Fellows’ Home. 

Hot Springs: 

Florence Crittenton Home. 

115 Crescent St. 

House of the Good Shepherd. 

1125 Malvern Ave. 

Sunshine Home 7 . 

Whittington Ave. 

Little Rock: 

Adeline M. Smith Industrial Home. 

1101 Izard St. 

M. W. Gibbs Old Ladies’ Home. 

2900 Center St. 

Florence Crittenton Home. 

3600 West Eleventh St. 

Sweet Home: 

Confederate Home. 

CALIFORNIA. 

Chula Vista: 

Fredericka Home for the Aged. 

429 Timken Building, San Diego. 
Decoto: 

Deco to Masonic House. 

Evergreen: 

Woman’s Relief Corps Home. 

R. D. 5, Box 39 (San Jose P. O.). 

Los Angeles: 

Door of Hope. 

116 West Twenty-fifth St. 

Florence Crittenton Home. 

1632 Santee St. 

Hollenbeck Home. 

573 South Boyle Ave. 

Home for the Aged. 

2700 East First St. 

House of the Good Shepherd. 

1312 Arlington St. 

Mercy Home. 

West Washington St., R. D. 7, Box 148 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

127 Wilmington St. 

Salvation Army Rescue Home. 

2670 North Griffin Ave. 

1 Not reported. 
s No rule against admission. 


Supervised or conducted 
by— 


Woman’s Christian Tem¬ 
perance Union. 

Salvation Army. 

Salvation Army. 

Independent Order of Odd 
Fellows. 

Mobile Female Benevolent 
Society. 

Private association. 

Little Sisters of the Poor... 

Trinity Parish (Episcopal). 

Salvation Army. 

Salvation Army. 

State of Alabama. 

National Florence Critten¬ 
ton Mission. 

State of Arizona. 


Independent Order of Odd 
Fellows. 

National Florence Critten¬ 
ton Mission. 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd. 


International Sunshine So¬ 
ciety. 

Woman’s Home Missionary 
Society, M. E. Church. 
Private corporation. 


National Florence Critten¬ 
ton Mission. 

State of Arkansas.. 


Private corporation. 


Masonic Grand Lodge of 
California. 

Woman’s Relief Corps. 


Private corporation. 


National Florence Critten¬ 
ton Mission. 

Private organization.. 


Little Sisters of the Poor 
Sisters of the Good Shepherd. 

Sisters of Mercy. 

Salvation Army. 

Salvation Army. 


Class of inmates received. 


Aged women and orphans.... 

Homeless unemployed men.. 

Fallen women and their in¬ 
fants. 

Odd Fellows, their widows 
and orphans. 

Aged and needy women. 

Homeless aged persons, de¬ 
linquent children, and or¬ 
phans. 

Aged poor persons. 

Homeless families 4 . 

Homeless unemployed men.. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 

Confederate veterans and 
their wives. 


Fallen women and their in¬ 
fants. 


Aged pioneers. 


Widows and orphans of Odd 
Fellows. 

Fallen women and their in¬ 
fants. 

Homeless or fallen women 
and destitute or delinquent 
children. 

Aged women and children.... 


Young girls. 

Homeless aged women. 

Fallen girls and their infants. 


Confederate veterans, their 
wives and widows. 


Aged men and women. 

Masons,and Masons’ widows. 


Mothers, sisters, widows, 
wives, and daughters of 
Civil War veterans. 

Needy women and their chil¬ 
dren. 

Fallen women and deserted 
children. 

Deserving aged persons. 

Destitute aged men and 
women. 

Fallen girls. 


Aged men and women. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 
Fallen women and children.. 


Year founded. 

Amount of entrance fee asked. 

Amount asked per week. 

Colored persons received. 

Paid employees at close of 

year. 

INMATES RECEIVED 
DURING YEAR. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

1S92 



No. 

8 

168 

C 1 ) 

(*) 

1907 



( s ) 

5 

155 

155 

1905 



Yes. 

4 

115 


115 

1909 



No. 

10 

20 

12 

8 

1827 



No. 

4 

(*) 


(') 

1904 



Yes. 

1 

2 

1 

1 

1901 


0) 

(■) 

( l ) 

( l ) 

0) 

(') 

1880 



No. 


3 

2 

1 

1908 



m 

3 

90 

90 


1910 



( 2 ) 

3 

26 

26 


1903 



No. 

16 

38 

37 

1 









1897 

( 5 ) 


Yes. 

1 

(') 

C 1 ) 

( l ) 

1911 








1S98 



No. 

8 

54 

23 

31 

1905 

( 5 ) 


No 

1 

25 


25 

1908 

( 5 ) 

No. 


27 


' 

27 

1898 






1884 


$1.75 

( 8 ) 

3 

98 


98 

1891 

$50 


(*) 

1 

2 


2 

1903 


No. 

2 

64 

8 

56 

1S90 



No. 

21 

28 

25 

3 

1909 

300 


No. 

6 

14 

7 

7 

1898 



No. 

21 

19 

16 

'l 

3, 

1887 



No. 

5 

3 


3; 

1902 


ic 3.00 

Yes. 


115 


115 

1890 



Yes. 

3 

40 


40 

1890 

300 


No. 

14 

19 

4 

15. 

1905 



Yes. 


46 

30 

16 

1904 



No. 


25 


25 

1890 

1,500 


No. 

5 

9 

6 

3; 

1902 



( 2 ) 

13 

37 

37 


1899 



O ' 

Yes. 

i 1 

85 


85 





1 




3 Equipment. 

4 Home consists of rent-free tenements. 


5 According to ability to pay. 

6 Not opened until 1911. 



































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


175 


OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN: 1910. 


INMATES PRESENT AT CLOSE OF YEAR. 


RECEIPTS 

DURING 

YEAR. 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Adults. 

Children. 

Total. 

Derived from— 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

Total. 

a 

Female. 

Permanently 

dependent. 

Temporarily 

dependent. 

W ay ward or 
delinquent. 

73 

4-» 

O 

H 

73 

a 

Female. 

Orphan or de¬ 

pendent. 

Received with 

parent. 

| Delinquent. 

Appro¬ 

pri¬ 

ations. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources. 

1 


1 

1 



95 


95 

90 


5 

$5,607 

$2,680 

$2,624 


$303 

$5,325 

$5,125 

$200 

$27,000 

$25,000 

$2,000 

1 

34 

34 



34 








13,282 


13,282 

11,491 

11,491 


31,891 

3 1,891 

2 

18 


18 



18 

17 


17 


17 


2,342 

1,312 

443 

$587 

2,506 

2,506 


6,500 

6,500 


3 

4 

1 

3 

4 



77 

45 

32 

77 



13,587 


10,000 

587 

3,000 

12,000 

10,000 

2,000 

100,000 

100,000 


4 

14 


14 

14 









3,300 


700 


2,600 

3,285 

3,285 

30,000 

30,000 


5 

6 


6 

6 



3 

2 

1 

1 

1 

1 

318 


215 


103 

432 

357 

75 

11,000 

11,000 


6 

( l ) 

P) 

C 1 ) 

p> 

P) 

P> 

(>) 

0) 

P) 

P) 

(>) 

(*) 

<>) 

0) 

P) 

o) 

(») 

(>> 

P) 

p> 

P) 

p) 

p) 

7 

6 

3 

3 


6 


6 

3 

3 


6 



p> 

p) 

(*) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

p> 

6,500 

6,500 


8 

19 

19 



19 








5,970 

5,970 

5,871 

5,871 

31,152 

3 1,152 


9 

12 

12 



12 








102 




102 

1,051 

1,051 


3 643 

3 643 


10 

78 

73 

5 

7s 









15,812 

15,025 



787 

15,126 

15,126 


60,000 

60,000 


11 

0) 


(>) 



( i ) 

(>) 

0) 

0) 

0) 



0) 

p> 

o) 

P) 

(>) 

(■) 

p) 

12,000 

12,000 


1 

2 

6 


6 

6 



123 

55 

68 

123 



22,000 


22,000 



19,000 

18,500 

500 

175,000 

175,000 


1 

8 


8 



8 

6 

3 

3 


6 


900 


500 

200 

200 

900 

900 


4,500 

4,500 


2 

10 


10 

1 

6 

3 

25 


25 

20 


5 

5,585 


2,227 

732 

2,626 

4,951 

3,795 

1,156 

18,000 

18,000 


3 

4 

98 


98 


98 








4,445 


2,074 

2,371 


4,445 

4,445 


15,000 

15,000 


5 

3 


3 

3 







» 

300 


150 

100 

50 

500 

500 


3,000 

3,000 


6 

8 


8 



8 

4 

3 

1 

4 



724 

300 

259 

165 


1,200 

1,200 


8,000 

8,000 


7 

80 


14 

80 









30,000 

30,000 




28,000 

28,000 


50,000 

50,000 


8 

34 

15 

19 

34 









8,635 

' 7,246 


1,389 

9,347 

7,288 

2,059 

31,200 

23,300 

7,900 

1 

05 

62 

QQ 

05 









9 51,125 


51,125 



27,669 

27,669 


257,000 

257,000 


2 

18 


18 

18 









4,770 

1,263 

1,839 


1,668 

5,170 

4,970 

200 

22,422 

22,422 


3 



a 

O 


c 

Q 

*; 


3 

5 

1 949 


796 

1,153 


1,944 

1,944 





4 

o 

47 


o 

47 


O 

47 

53 


(*) 


53 


6,720 

1,033 

5,125 

562 


3,577 

3,428 

149 

16,000 

16,000 

. 

5 

i/ 

119 

10 

O'* 

112 


\ / 




42,618 

3,683 

38,935 

25,000 

25,000 

. 

1,000,000 

P) 

p> 

6 

1 A K 

( i\ 

m 

m 


m 







<>) 


(>) 

P> 

P) 

(i) 

0) 

0) 

C 1 ) 


7 

140 


vv 

\ ? 

\ J 

v j 















78 


78 



78 







17,272 

400 

6,300 

. 

10,572 

16,887 

15,887 

1,000 

100,000 

100, ooc 

. 

8 

flA 


QQ 

66 








19,720 


1,571 

13,513 

4,636 

18,206 

18.20C 


11 100,000 

50,OOC 

50, OOC 

9 

9Q 

90 


29 








24,533 




24,533 

20,945 

20,80C 

145 

119,049 

119,04^ 

. 

10 

21 


21 


21 

22 

P) 

(0 

10 

4 

8 

3,659 

903 

1,354 

477 

925 

3,619 

3,61C 

. 

p) 

P) 

0) 

11 


* Closed temporarily. 

* Colored only. 


9 Includes receipts for San Gabriel Masonic Home. 11 Includes value of Home of the Guardian Angel. 

10 Average of maximum and minimum amounts. 








































































































































































































































176 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table III.—HOMES FOR THE CARE OF ADULTS 


S 

a 


12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 

21 

22 

23 

24 

25 

26 

27 

28 

29 

30 

31 

32 

33 

34 

35 

36 

37 

38 

39 

40 

41 

42 

43 

44 

45 

46 

47 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


Supervised or conducted 
by- 


CALIFORNIA—Continued. 


Oakland: 

Federation Woodyard and Men’s Home. 

360 Sixth St. 

German Old People’s Home of San Fran¬ 
cisco. 

Home for Aged and Infirm Colored People... 
5245 Harrison Ave., R. D. 1, Box 225. 

King’s Daughters’ Home for Incurables. 

3900 Broadway. 

Old Ladies’ Home. 

393 Forty-fifth St. 

Our Lady’s Home. 

1810 Thirty-fourth Ave. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

831 Webster St. 

Salvation Army Rescue Home. 

R. D.l, Box 224. 

Chabot School of Domestic Arts. 

66 Sixth St. 

Pacific Grove: 

John Tennant Memorial Home. 

Forest Ave. 

Sacramento: 

Marguerite Home. 

1617 Seventh St. 

Mater Misericordise Home. 

Twenty-third St. between Q and R Sts. 

Peniel Rescue Home,. 

1510 Third St. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

920 Fifth St. 

San Diego: 

Helping Hand Home. 

Fifteenth and J Sts. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

940 Third St. 

San Francisco: 

Chinese Mission Home. 

920 Sacramento St. 

Ellen Stark Ford Home. 

2025 Pine St. 

Florence Crittenton Home. 

344 Twentieth Ave. 

Hebrew Home for Aged Disabled. 

Howard and Twenty-first Sts. 

Home for the Aged.. 

Lake St. and Fourth Ave. 

Home for Aged and Infirm Israelites. 

Silver Ave. and Mission St. 

Old People’s Home. 

2501 Pine St. 

Oriental Home for Chinese Girls. 

940 Washington St. 14 

Protestant Episcopal Old Ladies’ Home—-. 
2158 Golden Gate Ave. 

St. Catherine’s Home and Training School.. 
901 Potrero Ave. 

St. Joseph’s Home for the Aged and Infirm.. 
Buena Vista Ave. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

1271 Mission St. 

San Francisco Home for Incurables. 

1442 Fulton St. 

San Francisco Ladies’ Protection and Relief 
Society Home. 

1200 Geary Place. 

University Mound Old Ladies’ Home. 

University and Bacon Sts. 

San Jose: 

Florence Crittenton Rescue Home. 

942 Park Ave. 

Pratt Home and Sheltering Arms. 

First and Humboldt Sts. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

573 South Market St. 

Santa Monica: 

National Home for Disabled Volunteer Sol¬ 
diers. 

Soldiers’ Home P. O. 

Stockton: 

St. Joseph’s Home. 

North California St. 


-Associated Charities. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

King’s Daughters. 

Ladies’ Relief Society of 
Oakland. 

Sisters of Mercy. 

Salvation Army. 

Salvation Army. 

Trustees of Anthony Chabot 
Endowment. 

Private corporation (Epis¬ 
copal). 

Private organization. 

Sisters of Mercy. 

Peniel Missionary Society... 
Salvation Army. 

Private corporation. 

Salvation Army. 


Presbyterian Church,U.S.A. 

Woman’s Home Missionary 
Society, M. E. Church. 

National Florence Critten¬ 
ton Mission. 

Private corporation. 

Little Sisters of the Poor.... 

Pacific Hebrew Orphan Asy¬ 
lum and Home Society. 

Private corporation. 

Women’s Home Missionary 
Society, M. E. Church. 

Private corporation (Epis¬ 
copal). 

Sisters of Mercy. 

Franciscan Sisters of the 
Sacred Heart. 

Salvation Army. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 


Private corporation 


National Florence Critten¬ 
ton Mission. 

Private organization. 

Salvation Army. 


Uf S. Government 


Sisters of St. Dominic 


Class of inmates received. 

T3 

© 

'O 

§ 

o 

S-4 

C3 

© 

!* 

Amount of entrance fee asked. 

Amount asked per week. 

Colored persons received. 

Paid employees at close of 

year. 

INMATES RECEIVED 
DURING YEAR. 

73 

O 

© 

73 

£ 

© 

73 

I 

© 

Ph 

Homeless unemployed men.. 

1910 



Yes. 

2 

10,000 

10,000 



1890 

$2,000 


No. 

12 

19 

9 

10 


1892 

500 


Yes. 

3 




Noncontagious incurables.... 

1897 

2,000 

2 $10.00 

Yes. 

20 

0) 

( l ) 

( l ) 

Aged women . 

1870 

1,250 


No. 

14 

l 


i 

Aged men and women_. 

1870 


8 8.00 

No. 

15 

li 

5 

6 

Homeless unemployed men.. 

1903 



( 6 ) 

7 

no 

no 



1892 



Yes. 

5 

95 


95 

dren. 









U nemployed women and girls. 

1887 


( 8 ) 

Yes. 

4 

83 


83 

Aged men and women 

1895 


8 6.25 

(«) 

2 

( l ) 

( l ) 

0) 

Homeless gentlewomen.._ 

1884 

6 893 


No. 

5 

1 

1 

Aged men and women. 

1895 

0) 

0) 

0) 

(') 

( l ) 

0) 

0) 

Destitute or fallen women 

1899 

( e ) 


Yes. 


155 

20 

135 

and girls, and their infants. 










1906 



( 8 ) 

3 

21 

21 


Destitute women and children 

1894 


( 8 ) 

Yes. 

6 

( l ) 

(») 

( l ) 

Homeless unemployed men.. 

1909 



(«) 

4 

19 

16 

3 

Chinese and Japanese slave 

1873 


io 75.00 

No. 

4 

20 


20 

and homeless girls. 









Needy Japanese and Korean 

1902 


8 1.88 

No. 

6 

20 


20 

women and children. 









Fallen women and girls. 

1889 

( u > 

( ll ) 

Yes. 

4 

42 

7 

35 

Aged men and women. 

1889 



No. 

6 

3 

3 


Destitute aged persons. 

1901 



Yes. 


96 

48 

48 

Aged and infirm Hebrews.... 

1871 



No. 

10 

8 

6 

2 

Aged men and women_ *. _ 

1873 

1,500 


( 6 ) 

32 

184 

59 

125 

Chinese dependent women, 

1870 


No. 

5 

6 


6 

orphan and slave girls. 









Aged Episcopalian women... 

1S69 

1.500 


No. 

6 

1 


1 

Delinquent, dependent girls, 

1857 

(15) 

Yes. 

7 

60 


60 

and "inebriate women. 








Aged men and women. 

1889 


( ll ) 

Yes. 

10 

(18) 

( ,6 ) 

(i.) 

Homeless unemployed men.. 

1904 


(«) 

10 

168 

168 

Aged convalescents and non- 

1907 


9.00 

0 7 ) 

8 

50 

22 

28 

contagious incurables. 









Needy women, orphan and 

1853 


( 8 ) 

No. 

24 

90 

59 

31 

homeless children. 









Aged women. 

1884 

1.120 


No. 

8 

1 


1 

Fallen women and girls. 

1903 

( 9 ) 


Yes. 

2 

43 


43 

Aged women. 

0) 

0) 

( l ) 

0) 

( l ) 

(*) 

( l ) 

0) 

Homeless unemployed men.. 

1905 



( 6 ) 

3 

95 

95 


Disabled volunteer soldiers 

1865 



Yes. 

432 

715 

715 


and sailors. 









Aged men.. 

1899 

(!9) 


No. 


9 

9 








1 Not reported. 

2 For monthly patients only. 

»Included in report of Children’s Home. 

4 Includes report of Children’s Home. 

5 Average maximum and minimum amounts. 


6 No rule against admission. 

7 Equipment. 

8 According to ability to pay. 

9 Confinement fee, if able. 

10 Per year; no weekly charge. 

























































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


177 


OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


INMATES PRESENT AT CLOSE OF YEAR. 


RECEIPTS 

DURING 

YEAR. 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Adults. 

Children. 

Total. 

Derived from— 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

Total. 

d 

*3 

a 

d 

*3 

a 

Permanently 

dependent. 

Temporarily 

dependent. 

Wayward or 
delinquent. 

3 

O 

Eh 

d 

3 

a 

3 

a 

a> 

Ph 

Orphan or de¬ 

pendent. 

Received with 

parent. 

| Delinquent. 

Appro¬ 

pri¬ 

ations. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources. 

45 

45 



45 








$3,800 


$976 

$1,437 

$1,387 

$3,800 

$3,577 

$223 

$250 

$250 


12 

96 

41 

55 

96 









52,588 


4.644 

43,010 

4,934 

27,008 

1.8,878 

8 130 

222 750 

150 000 

$72 750 

13 

11 


11 

11 









1,659 


1,059 

600 

1,640 

(i) 

0) 

11,042 

9,000 

2,042 

14 

72 

24 

48 

72 



i 

i 


1 



69,404 


42,000 

27,404 


27,404 

27,404 

45,000 

45,000 

15 

25 


25 

25 



( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

0) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

4 21 901 

$3,092 

2 052 

5 ? 327 

10 430 

4 22,135 

20 063 

2 072 

(i) 

4 35 000 

( l ) 

16 

90 

40 

50 

90 



to 

c i ) 

(>) 

0) 

(i) 

0) 

(*) 

(i) 

( i ) 

17 

15 

15 



15 








13,164 


13.164 

12.203 

12,203 

7 2,765 

i 2,765 


18 

22 


22 



22 

15 

9 

6 


15 


4,217 

500 

2,051 

1,534 

132 

4,127 

3,577 

550 

7,500 

7,500 


19 

19 


19 


19 








5.299 

429 

4,870 

3,467 

3,467 


89,000 

9,000 

80,000 

20 

8 

2 

6 

8 









2,500 



1,000 

1,500 

2,500 

2,500 


31,500 

15,000 

16,500 

21 

10 


10 

10 









4,924 



512 

4,412 

6,725 

6,725 


105,033 

38,840 

66,193 

22 

( l ) 

0) 

(*) 

<») 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

(*) 

0) 

(') 

(•) 

0) 

(>) 

(>) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

23 

14 


14 



14 

11 

2 

9 

ll 



3,718 

324 

1,536 

1,619 

239 

3,612 

3,263 

349 

20,257 

20,000 

257 

24 

5 

5 



5 








3,750 



3,750 

3,570 

3,570 


2 567 

7 567 


25 

(!) 


(*) 

(‘) 

(!) 


30 

12 

18 

30 



6,100 

700 

400 


5,000 

6,100 

6,100 


10,000 

10,000 


26 

4 

4 

4 








4,464 




4,464 

4,672 

4,063 

609 

51,252 

51,252 


27 

52 


52 


52 


17 


17 

17 



7,103 


6,903 

200 

6, S04 

6,804 


65,000 

65,000 


28 

9 


9 


9 


24 

1 

23 

24 



4,500 


4,000 

500 


4,500 

4,500 


15,000 

15,000 


29 

11 


11 



11 

8 

3 

5 


8 


3,933 

1,301 

777 

1,582 

273 

4,136 

4,136 


10,000 

10,000 


30 

21 

15 

6 

21 









16,156 

4,925 

11,231 

55,118 

8,540 

46,578 

64,789 

53,578 

11,211 

31 

12307 

153 

154 

307 









(i) 


0) 


0) 

(i) 

( l ) 

(*) 

0) 

( l ) 

(!) 

32 

36 

20 

16 

36 









(13) 

(13) 

(‘3) 


(13) 

20,748 

12,578 

8,170 

20,310 

20,310 

(13) 

33 

163 

52 

111 

163 









55,500 

7,500 

38,000 

10,000 

52,000 

47,000 

5,000 

405,000 

225,000 

180,000 

34 

3 


3 


3 


37 


37 

37 



4,993 


4,993 

4,267 

4,267 

18,000 

18,000 

35 

31 


31 

31 









13,529 


11,077 

1,705 

747 

10,045 

8,171 

1,874 

43,000 

23,000 

20,000 

36 

40 


40 

14 


26 

184 


184 

110 


74 

24,066 

132 

1,046 

22,888 


31,175 

(!) 

(i) 

160,000 

160,000 

37 

100 

51 

49 

100 








(16) 


(16) 

(16) 

(16) 

(16) 

(16) 

(16) 

(16) 

(16) 


38 

33 

33 


33 








27,225 


21,225 

24,485 

24,133 

' 352 

24,502 

24,502 


39 

20 

8 

12 

20 









13,551 


1,328 

4,810 

7,413 

11,137 

11,073 

64 

15,109 

15,109 

40 

3 

3 

3 



117 

56 

61 

115 


2 

13,064 

4,325 

372 

4,458 

3,909 

25,775 

23,926 

1,849 

333,690 

227,230 

106,460 

41 

22 


22 

22 









6,015 

106 

1,000 

4,909 

5,338 

5,338 

100,000 

40,000 

60,000 

42 

5 


5 



5 







1,362 

109 

666 

78 

509 

1,413 

1,235 

178 

20,000 

20 000 

43 

0) 

0) 

( i ) 

(>) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

(») 

0) 

0) 

0) 

(■) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

(>) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

44 

4 

4 



4 








3,823 




3,823 

3,794 

3,426 

368 

7 1,046 

7 1,046 


45 

2 19Q 

2 199 


2 199 









396,262 

‘ 8 385,700 



10,562 

391,550 

383,309 

8,241 

1, 648,460 

1,648,460 


46 

27 

27 


27 









(SO) 


(SO) 


(SO) 

(SO) 

(SO) 

(SO) 

(»°) 


47 


* 











1 





u Varies. 16 Included in report of St. Joseph’s Hospital, San Francisco. 

12 Segregation estimated. 17 Indeterminate, 

is Included in report of Pacific Hebrew Orphan Asylum. 18 From U. S. Government. 

14 Formerly 1918 University Ave., Berkeley. 19 From $1,000 to $2,000 according to age. 

i& From $5'to $15 per month. 20 Included in report of St. Joseph’s Hospital, Stockton. 


44153°—14-12 




















































































































































































































Institution number. 


178 BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table III.—HOMES FOR THE CARE OF ADULTS 


48 

49 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


CALIFORNIA—Continued. 
Thermalito: 

Odd Fellows’ Home of California.. 


Yountville: 

Veterans’ Home of California. 
Veterans’ Home P. O. 

COLORADO. 


Supervised or conducted 
by- 


independent Order of Odd 
Fellows. 

State of California.. 


Class of inmates received. 


Odd Fellows, their wives, 
widows, and Rebekahs. 

Honorably discharged U. S. 
veterans. 


■a 

<6 

T3 

Cl 

3 

o 




1895 


1S84 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

t 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 


19 


Colorado Springs: 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

120 East Huerfano St. 

Union Printers’ Home. 

Denver: 

Florence Crittenton Home.. 

4901 West Colfax ave. 

House of the Good Shepherd.. 

South Cherokee St. and West Cedar Ave. 

Oakes Home 8 .. 

2825 West Thirty-second St. 

Old Ladies’ Home.".. 

West Thirty-eighth Ave. and Quitman 
St. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

1356 Larimer St. 

Monte Vista: 

Colorado Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Home. 

Pueblo: 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

110 West D St, 


Salvation Army. 

International Typographical 
Union. 

National Florence Critten¬ 
ton Mission. 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd 

Episcopal Diocese of Colo¬ 
rado. 

Ladies’ Relief Society of 
Denver. 

Salvation Army. 


State of Colorado 
Salvation Army. 


Homeless unemployed men.. 

Aged, indigent, and sick 
union printers. 

Fallen girls and their infants.. 

Wayward girls and depen¬ 
dent children. 

Consumptives. 


Aged and destitute women... 


Homeless unemployed men.. 


Aged soldiers. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 


1905 

1S92 

1893 
1883 

1894 
1874 

1900 

1SS9 

1905 


CONNECTICUT. 

Bridgeport: 

Burroughs Home. 

Fairfield Ave. and Ellsworth St. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home.. 

515 Housatonic. Ave. 

Sterling Widows’ Home. 

354 Prospect St. 

Darien: 

Fitch’s Home for Soldiers. 

Noroton Heights P. O. 

Groton: 

Odd Fellows’ Home of Connecticut. 

Hartford: 

Church Home of Hartford. 

123 Retreat Ave. 

Hebrew Ladies Old People’s Home. 

33 Wooster St. 

House of the Good Shepherd. 

170 Sisson Ave. 

Old People’s Home. 

36 Jefferson St. 

Open Hearth. 

73 Grove St. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

33 Spruce St. 

Shelter for Women. 

76 Temple St, 

Widows’ Home 12 . 

133 Market St. 

Widows’ Home of Farmington Avenue Con¬ 
gregational Church. 

210 Windsor Ave. 

Widows’ Home of Park Congregational 
Church. 

216 Windsor Ave. 

Woman’s Aid Society Home. 

1 Pavilion St. 

Meriden: 

Curtis Home. 

380 Crown St. 

Middletown: 

St. Luke’s Home for Aged and Destitute 
Women. 

Pearl St. 

New Britain: 

Erwin Home. 

Bassett and Ellis Sts. 


Private corporation.. 

Salvation Army.. 

Bridgeport Protestant Wid¬ 
ows’ Society. 

Soldiers’ Hospital Board of 
Connecticut. 


Indigent single women. 

Homeless unemployed men... 
Needy widows. 


1904 

1907 

1S83 


Veterans 


1887 


Independent Order of Odd 
Fellows. 


Odd Fellows, their wives and 
widows. 


1892 


Private corporation (Episco¬ 
pal). 

Private corporation. 


Aged women. 

Indigent aged Hebrews 


1876 

1903 


Sisters of the Good Shepherd 
Hartford Hospital. 


Erring and dependent girls, 
and female inebriates. 
Aged men and women. 


1902 

1873 


Private corporation 
Salvation Army.... 


Homeless men, inebriates, 1889 
and discharged prisoners. 
Homeless unemployed men... 1903 


Private corporation. 

Private corporation (Episco¬ 
pal). 

Private corporation. 


Wayward girls, unemployed 1891 
women, and children. 

Aged Episcopalian women... 1854 


Elderly deserving widows.... 


1867 


Private corporation 


Destitute widows 


1867 


Woman’s Aid Society of 
Hartford. 


Friendless and fallen women.. 


1878 


Private corporation 


Destitute aged women and 
needy children. 


1884 


Private corporation (Episco¬ 
pal). 


Destitute and aged women... 


1860 


South Congregational Church 


Needy self-supporting women 


1S90 


Amount of entrance fee asked. 

Amount asked per week. 

Colored persons received. 

Paid employees at close of 

year. 



No. 

20 



Yes. 

360 



( 2 ) 

1 



Yes. 

35 


( 6 ) 

Yes. 

6 


7 $1.63 

No. 

8 


7 16.00 

No. 

100 

i $450 

( 9 ) 

No. 

9 



(2) 

19 



Yes. 

60 



(2) 

1 


u 11.00 

No. 

5 



(2) 

8 


7 1.25 

No. 

6 



Yes. 

116 



No. 

6 

1,000 


No. 

4 



No. 

3 


7 1.75 

Yes. 


1,000 


No. 

21 



Yes. 

8 



(2) 

7 


2.45 

Yes. 

2 


(18) 

No. 

2 


.50 

Yes. 

1 


.50 

No. 

1 



Yes. 

2 


(“) 

No. 

22 


4.00 

No. 

5 






ii 1.50 

No. 

2 


INMATES received 
DURING YEAR. 



© 

13 

© 

1 

Eh 

a 


28 

25 

3 

437 

437 


7 

7 


83 

83 


301 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

244 


244 

610 

260 

350 

10 


10 

60 

60 


115 

115 


11 

11 


63 

63 


1 


1 

226 

226 


8 

8 


( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

88 


88 

8 

3 

5 

22,424 

22,424 


111 

111 


315 


315 

2 


2 

1 


1 

2 


2 

28 


28 

5 

2 

3 

1 


1 

3 


3 


1 Includes $205,859 from U. S. Government. 

2 No rule against admission. 

3 Equipment. 

* Not reported. 

6 Confinement fee, if able. 

6 For court cases, $15 per month. 

7 Average of maximum and minimum amounts. 

8 Includes report of Oakes Home, Heart ease, and Adams Memorial Home. 
































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


179 


OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN: 1910 —Continued. 


INMATES PRESENT AT CLOSE OF YEAR. 


RECEIPTS 

DURING 

YEAR. 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 


Adults. 

Children. 

Total. 

Derived from— 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

Total. 

© 

•a 

a 

Female. 

Permanently 

dependent. 

Temporarily 

dependent. 

Wayward or 
delinquent. 

*53 

-*-> 

o 

<D 

a 

Female. 

Orphan or de¬ 

pendent. 

Received with 

parent. 

Delinquent. 

Appro¬ 

pri¬ 

ations. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources. 

140 

no 

30 

140 









$37,404 


$37,404 



835 351 

$26,564 

$8 787 

850 000 

$50 000 


48 

979 

979 


979 









i 225,859 

i $225,859 



225 859 

205 859 

20 000 

462 495 

462 495 


49 

2 

2 



2 








1,850 



$1,850 

1 733 

1 521 

212 

3 462 

3 462 


1 

122 

122 


89 

33 








122,293 


122 293 


103 367 

(41 

to 

1 000 000 

1 000,000 


2 

47 


47 



47 

49 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

49 



8,015 


3,810 

$4,205 


10 436 

8,740 

1 696 

35 000 

35,000 


3 

110 


110 



110 

168 

168 

168 



15,198 


5, 475 

4 628 

5 OQ5 

16 203 

14 083 

2,120 

100 000 

100,000 


4 

142 

65 

77 


142 








76,283 



65,413 

10,870 

3 noQ 

93,426 

12 045 

93 426 

350 000 

350,000 


5 

68 


68 

41 

27 








11,427 

. 

2,741 

117 

5,560 

11 235 

810 

85 000 

25,000 

$60,000 

6 

19 

19 



19 








10,463 

10,463 

9 966 

9,715 

251 

1 594 

1,594 

7 

220 

220 


220 









10 52,000 

>« 52,000 



52 000 

52,000 

175,000 

175,000 


8 

1 

1 



1 








1,783 



1 783 

1 665 

1,453 

212 

544 

544 


9 

23 


23 

22 

1 








10,173 



2,247 

7,926 

7 512 

7,512 


208,241 

50,950 

157,291 

I 

18 

18 



18 








7,056 



7,056 

8,885 

8,885 


3 1,669 

3 1,669 

2 

29 


29 

20 

9 








7,381 


2,257 

570 

4,554 

7,381 

7,381 


119,053 

42,207 

76,846 

3 

501 

501 


496 

5 



• 





131,609 

130,000 


1,609 

131,505 

130,562 

943 

293,936 

257,336 

36,600 

4 

30 

24 

6 

30 









11,227 

46 

3,004 

8,177 

12,557 

7,557 

5,000 

82,816 

45,000 

37,816 

5 

16 


16 

16 









7,198 


1,599 

3,966 

1,633 

5,230 

4,378 

852 

52,913 

(<) 

< 4 ) 

6 

9 

3 

6 

9 









6,525 


6,268 

257 

7,517 

2,339 

5,178 

11,500 

11,.500 

7 

129 


129 



129 

12 


12 

12 



20,119 

15,427 

1,009 

3,683 

18,732 

16,297 

2,435 

153,144 

153,144 


8 

66 

12 

54 

66 









38,970 

11,225 

12,386 

15,359 

21,165 

20,679 

486 

(4) 

(4) 

289,671 

9 

86 

86 



86 








12,816 


2,316 

10,500 

12,596 

12,596 


67,859 

47,000 

20,859 

10 

25 

25 



25 








13,839 



13,839 

10,742 

10,742 


3 2,765 

3 2,765 

11 

9 


9 


3 

6 

3 

2 

1 

1 

2 


2,729 


2,542 

187 

2,395 

2,395 


7,000 

7,000 


12 

24 


24 

24 



1 


1 


1 


19,312 


11,150 

1,050 

7,112 

24,165 

1,005 

23,160 

50,000 

50,000 


13 

12 


12 

12 









488 


488 

434 

177 

257 

14,000 

10,000 

4,000 

14 

12 


12 

12 









518 



247 

271 

240 

240 


12,399 

6,000 

6,399 

15 

8 


8 



8 







853 




853 

2,939 

2,939 


2,054 

2,054 

16 

29 


29 

29 



28 

9 

19 

28 



(<) 



(<) 

(4) 

(4) 

(<) 


(4) 

(<) 

( 4 ) 

17 

12 


12 

12 









3,142 


508 

1,809 

825 

2,917 

2,917 


41,757 

19,183 

22,574 

18 

27 


27 


27 








2,220 



533 

1,687 

2,421 

2,421 


80,000 

46,000 

34,000 

19 


















9 Boarders only; $15 to $20 per month. 

10 Includes $20,000 from U. 8. Government, 
u Per month; no weekly charge. 

12 Includes report of Widows' Home, 133 Market St.; Widows’ nome, 13 South Hudson St.; Geo. Beach Home, 184 Wethersfield Ave., and Kelsey Memorial, 193 
Wethersfield Ave. 

1 3 From $2 to $12 per month, 
n According to ability to pay. 

































































































































































































180 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table III.—HOMES FOR THE CARE OF ADULTS 


& 

a 

3 

a 

3 

o 


20 

21 

22 

23 

24 

25 

26 

27 

28 

29 

30 

31 

32 

33 

34 

35 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


10 

11 


CONNECTICUT—Continued. 

New Haven: 

First Church Home. 

125 Wall St. 

Florence Crittenton Mission. 

432 Oak St. 

Home for the Aged. 

238 Winthrop Ave. 

Home for the Friendless. 

118 Clinton Ave. 

St. Paul’s Church Home for Aged Women... 
600 Chapel St. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

362 Exchange St. 

Trinity Church Home. 

406 Oak St. 

New London: 

Smith Memorial Home. 

29 Masonic St. 

Norwich: 

Eliza Huntington Memorial Home. 

99 Washington St. 

Johnson Home. 

100 Town St. 

Sheltering Arms. 

Harland Road. 

Stamford: 

St. John’s Church House. 

Woodland Ave. and Pacific St. 
Wallingford: 

Masonic Home. 

Waterbury: 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

212 Meadow St. 

Southmayd Home. 

885 North Main St. 

West Hartford: 

St. Mary’s Home for the Aged. 

Albany Ave. and Steele St. 

DELAWARE. 

Dover: 

Palmer Home. 

American Ave. 

Wilmington: 

Florence Crittenton Home. 

506 West Fifth St. 

Home for Aged Women. 

1109 Gilpin Ave. 

Home for the Aged. 

4 Grant Ave. 

Home of Merciful Rest. 

Lovering Ave. and Union St. 

Layton Home for Colored Persons. 

Thirty-fifth and Market Sts. 

Minquadale Home. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

Second and French Sts. 

Sarah Ann White Home. 

822 French St. 

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA. 
Washington: 

Aged Woman’s Home. 

1225 Wisconsin Ave. 

Baptist Home. 

3248 N St. NW. 

Bruen Home.. 

3300 0 St. NW. 

Christian and Eleanors Ruppert Home. 

Anacostia (Good Hope Road). 

Edes Home. 

Thirtieth and N Sts. NW. 

Epiphany Church Home... 

1221 Massachusetts Ave. 

Florence Crittenton Hope and Help Mission 
218 Third St. NW. 

Good Samaritan Home.. 

1617 L St. NW. 

Home for the Aged. 

Third and H Sts. NE. 

House of Mercy. 

Klingle Road and Rosemont Ave. 

House of the Good Shepherd. 

Thirty-sixth and Reservoir Sts. 


Supervised or conducted 
by— 


Private corporation (Congre¬ 
gational). 

National Florence Critten¬ 
ton Mission. 

Little Sisters of the Poor... 

Private corporation. 

St. Paul’s Episcopal Church 

Salvation Army. 

Trinity Church (Episcopal) 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation.. 

United Workers.. 

St. John’s Church (Episco¬ 
pal). 

Masonic Grand Lodge of 
Connecticut. 

Salvation Army.. 

Private corporation.. 

Sisters of Mercy.. 

King’s Daughters.. 

National Florence Critten¬ 
ton Mission. 

Private corporation. 

Little Sisters of the Poor... 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Salvation Army. 

Private corporation. 


Union Benevolent Society. 

Private corporation Baptist) 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Epiphany Church. 

National Florence Critten¬ 
ton Mission. 

Society of St. Vincent de 
Paul. 

Little Sisters of the Poor... 

Private corporation (Epis¬ 
copal). 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd. 


Class of inmates received. 


Destitute aged women. 

Fallen girls. 

Destitute aged persons. 

Aged women and homeless 
girls. 

Aged Episcopalian women.. 
Homeless unemployed men. 
Impoverished women. 

Indigent aged women. 

Indigent gentlewomen. 

Aged and needy women. 

Sick, aged, and infirm women 

Aged women and orphans... 

Masons and their families_ 


S3 

3 

3 

O 


Homeless unemployed men.. 

Homeless, aged, and disabled 
women. 

Worthy aged men and women 


Aged men and women. 

Fallen, destitute, or homeless 
women. 

Destitute aged women. 

Destitute aged persons. 

Noncontagious incurables (fe¬ 
males) . 

Aged men and women. 

Dependent aged couples and 
men. 

Homeless unemployed men... 

Blind and aged men and wo¬ 
men. 


Destitute aged women. 

Aged and infirm women.... 

Homeless mothers and chil¬ 
dren. 

Aged men and women. 

Aged and indigent widows.. 

Needy aged women. 

Fallen women and depend¬ 
ent children. 

Temporarily dependent men 
and wayward boys. 

Destitute'aged men and wo¬ 
men. 

Fallen girls and their infants. 

Erring women and girls, and 
delinquent children. 


1868 

1901 

1901 

1867 

1903 

1900 
1862 

1881 

1872 

1905 

1877 

1882 

1889 

1898 

1898 

1880 

1907 

1883 

1865 

1903 

1901 
1894 
1891 
1905 
1894 


1868 

1880 

1896 

1897 
1906 
1858 
1888 
1895 
1871 
1888 
1882 


co 
a) 


3 

cj 


3 

3 

O 

a 

<0 


$100 

500 

500 


1,500 


300 

( 6 ) 

«275 


300 

150 

( 7 ) 


( 8 ) 


200 


75 


(>«) 


o 

ft 

S3 


3 

3 

O 

a 


1.00 


( s ) 


5.00 


( s ) 
2.00 


4.00 


Colored persons received. 

Paid employees at close of 1 

year. 

INMATES RECEIVED 
DURING YEAR. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

No. 

4 

2 


2 

Yes. 

3 

25 


25 

Yes. 

.... 

46 

15 

31 

Yes. 

9 

27 

1 

26 

No. 

6 




( 3 ) 

9 

332 

332 


No. 

4 

2 


2 

No. 

7 




No. 

4 

1 


1 

Yes. 

5 

3 


3 

Yes. 

7 

6 


6 

No. 

6 

12 


12 

No. 

14 

25 

15 

10 

( 3 ) 

6 

123 

123 


( 3 ) 

3 

1 


1 

No. 

22 

18 

8 

10 

No. 

4 

5 


5 

No. 

1 

( l ) 

(») 

(*) 

No. 

7 

'2 


2 

Yes. 

.... 

31 

19 

12 

No. 

6 

2 


2 

Yes. 

3 

3 

2 

1 

No. 

4 




( 3 ) 

6 

77 

77 


(») 

1 

2 

1 

1 

No. 

( l ) 

0) 

(>) 

(*) 

No. 

5 

3 


3 

No. 


(>) 

( l ) 

(*> 

No. 

6 

9 

2 

7 

No. 

4 

5 


5 

No. 

4 

5 


5 

No. 

5 

609 

76 

533 

Yes. 

1 

419 

419 


Yes. 

.... 

58 

27 

31 

No. 

4 

14 


14 

No. 

1 

49 


49 


1 Not reported. 

2 According to ability to pay. 


3 No rule against admission. 6 Confinement fee. $25 if able. 

* Equipment. 6 Average of maximum and minimum amounts. 











































































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


181 


OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN: 1910 —-Continued. 




INMATES 

PRESENT 

AT CLOSE OF TEAR. 


RECEIPTS 

DURING 

YEAR. 


PAYMENTS DURING TEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Adults. 

Children. 

Total. 

Derived from— 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

Total. 

® 

a 

Female. 

Permanently 

dependent. 

Temporarily 

dependent. 

Wayward or 
delinquent. 

*3 

o 

H 

d 

3 

Female. 

Orphan or de¬ 

pendent. 

Received with 

parent. 

[ Delinquent. 

Appro¬ 

pri¬ 

ations. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources. 

10 


10 

10 









$3 4.57 


$7.50 

3.57 

35n 

«3 330 

#3 180 


«48 970 

non 

«9ft 97H 

20 

20 


20 



20 

4 


4 


4 

. - . 

4,349 

$2,809 

1,068 

31 

441 

3,503 

3,301 

202 

12,500 

10,000 

2,500 

21 

159 

69 

90 

159 









12,811 


12,811 



16,468 


(>) 

rn 

m 


22 

44 


44 

37 

4 

3 

5 

1 

4 

1 

4 


8.050 


1,274 

1,938 

4,838 

7,712 

7,712 

124,848 

35,965 

88,883 

23 

12 


12 

12 









(») 


(>) 

(») 

(») 

0 ) 


(*) 

(>) 

(») 

24 
















31 

31 



31 








12,121 




12 121 

12,920 

12 920 


4 3,102 

4 3,102 


25 

7 


7 

7 









3,174 


654 

520 

2 non 

2 408 

2 408 


40 000 

40 000 

26 

14 


14 

14 









9.500 


9 />no 

0 .500 

m 

(») 

191,428 

69,128 

122 300 

27 

9 


9 

9 









3,242 




3,242 

3 168 

3,168 

80,000 

10 000 

70,000 

28 

11 


11 

11 









7,390 




7 300 

3 .583 

3 408 

17.5 

115,188 

7,000 

108 188 

29 

14 


14 

14 









3,035 


197 

1^826 

1 012 

.5 063 

4,324 

739 

29 010 

6,000 

23 010 

30 

1 


1 

1 



12 


12 

12 



5,111 


1,971 

634 

2 .500 

3,962 

3,962 

(l) 

(!) 

14,376 

31 

94 

43 

51 

94 









27,198 


4,868 


22,330 

20,434 

18,672 

1,762 

112,332 

46,933 

65,399 

32 

17 

17 



17 








6,613 



6,613 

7,733 

7,733 

* 1,803 

1,803 

33 

7 


7 

7 









3,126 


1,196 

1,100 

830 

3,387 

2,684 

703 

29,053 

20,000 

9,053 

34 

169 

50 

119 

169 









31,602 


125 

29,857 

1,620 

31,602 

31,602 

125,000 

125,000 

35 

19 

2 

17 

19 









2,149 


510 

1,165 

474 

2,198 

2,198 


18,000 

15,000 

3,000 

1 

13 


13 



13 

6 

(») 

(») 


6 


2,100 


1,819* 

50 

231 

1,409 

1,121 

288 

8,200 

8,000 

200 

2 

34 


34 

34 







4,995 


1,100 

. 250 

3,645 

7,300 

7,000 

300 

95,000 

30,000 

65,000 

3 

89 

41 

48 

89 









6,239 


6,239 


3,546 

3,546 


60,235 

60,235 

4 

10 


10 

10 









12,688 


12,6S8 



10,943 

3,358 

7,585 

18,000 

18,000 


5 

22 

6 

16 

22 









870 


100 

150 

620 

1,700 

1,000 

700 

12,400 

12,400 


6 

17 

17 


17 









2,985 


2,165 


820 

3,286 

3,286 


33,644 

11,894 

21,750 

7 

16 

16 



16 


' 






6,795 




6,795 

8,466 

8,466 


4 2,191 

4 2,191 

8 

15 

3 

12 

15 









901 


264 

350 

287 

875 

816 

59 

6,500 

6.500 


9 

12 


12 

12 









(1) 

(>) 

(!) 

0 ) 

(») 

(!) 

(I) 

<») 

(!) 

(!) 

(l) 

1 

20 


20 

20 









7,221 

575 

6,646 

3,558 

3,558 

43,600 

37,500 

6,100 

2 







120 

-M 

(>) 

120 



12,191 

' 

725 

9,506 

1,960 

13,190 

13,190 


(i) 

0 ) 

3 

29 

7 

22 

29 







6,653 


2,168 

4,485 

6,095 

6,095 


150,700 

60,000 

90,700 

4 

14 


14 

14 









10,186 




10,186 

9,545 

7,245 

2,300 

245,687 

54,801 

190,886 

5 

22 


22 

22 









6,610 


371 


6,240 

6,651 

6,110 

540 

148,894 

142,824 

6,070 

6 

74 


74 


74 


37 

10 

27 

18 

19 


11,611 

2,500 

3,646 


5,465 

11,611 

9,887 

1,724 

55,300 

55,300 

7 

18 

18 


2 

15 

1 







1,333 

1,333 



1,333 

1,189 

144 

< 650 

4 650 


8 

200 

98 

102 

200 




.... 





7,997 


7,997 



(!) 

(!) 

(») 

8,383 

(!) 

(!) 

9 

20 


20 



20 

9 

6 

3 


9 


5,177 


2,612 

515 

2,050 

4,752 

4,752 

42,000 

25,000 

17,000 

10 

44 


44 



44 

31 


31 



31 

12,211 

603 

728 

619 

10,261 

24,587 

9,213 

15,374 

24,824 

24,824 

11 


i Couples from $350 to $450; men from $200 to $300. 
8 Residents, $150: nonresidents, $175. 


® Colored only. 

io Confinement fee, $35 if able. 





























































































































































































































Institution number. 


182 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table III.—HOMES FOR THE CARE OF ADULTS 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


Supervised or conducted 
by— 


Class of inmates received. 


DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA—Continued. 


12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 
21 
22 
23 


24 


Washington— Continued. 

Jewish Foster Home i. 

3213 Q St. NW. 

Lenthall Home for Widows. 

Nineteenth and G Sts. NW. 

Louise Home. 

1500 Massachusetts Ave. NW. 

Masonic and Eastern Star Home. 

Takoma Park (Sligo Mill Road). 

Methodist Home. 

601 M St. NW. 

Municipal Lodging House. 

312 Twelfth St. NW. 

National Colored Home. 

Eighth and Euclid Sts. NW. 

National Lutheran Home for the Aged. 
Langdon. 

Presbyterian Home for the Aged. 

1420 M St. NW. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

121 Pennsylvania Ave. NW. 

Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Temporary Home 
301 C. St. NW. 

Stoddard Baptist Home. 

Hamilton Road. 

United States Soldiers’ Home. 


25 Washington Home for Incurables. 

S and Thirty-second Sts. NW. 

26 Woman’s Christian Home. 

1719 Thirteenth St. NW. 


Private organization. 

Private corporation (Epis¬ 
copal). 

Trustees of W. W. Corcoran 
Endowment. 

Masonic and Eastern Star 
Orders. 

Methodist Episcopal Church 

District of Columbia. 

Private corporation. 

General Synod of the Luth¬ 
eran Church. 

Private corporation (Pres¬ 
byterian). 

Salvation Army. 

U. S. Government. 

Private corporation (Bap¬ 
tist). 

U. S. Government. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 


Mothers and dependent chil¬ 
dren. 

Dependent Episcopalian 
widows and children. 

Destitute educated gentle¬ 
women. 

Masons, their families, East¬ 
ern Starsand their children. 

Aged members of the church.. 

Homeless unemployed men... 

Destitute women and children 

Aged men and women. 

Destitute aged members of 
the church. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 

Veterans. 

Homeless, aged, and infirm 
persons. 

Discharged soldiers of the reg¬ 
ular army. 

Incurables. 

Transient and self-supporting 
women. 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 
8 


FLORIDA. 

Jacksonville: 

Confederate Veterans’ Home. 

Daniel Memorial Orphanage and Home for 
the Friendless. 

1920 Hubbard St. 

Home for the Aged. 

Laura and Eighth Sts. 

Pensacola: 

Woman’s Home. 

1310 North Davis St. 

Tampa: 

Old People’s Home. 

Garrison St. 

Woman’s Home and Hospital. 

105 West Ross Ave. 


State of Florida. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Protestant churches of 
Tampa. 


Confederate veterans. 

Friendless women and or¬ 
phans. 

Impoverished aged persons... 


Homeless women 


Aged and friendless men and 
women. 

Fallen and unemployed wo¬ 
men, and children. 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 


GEORGIA. 

Americus: 

Masonic Widows’ and Orphans’ Home 
Lee St. 

Atlanta: 

Carter Home.. 

185 West Mitchell St. 

Christian Helpers’ League. 

53i Decatur St. 

Confederate Soldiers’ Home of Georgia. 
Confederate Ave. 

Florence Crittenton Home.. 

Simpson St., R. D. 7, Box 99. 

Home for Incurables.. 

220 South Boulevard. 

Home for Old Women.. 

61 West End Ave. 

Home for the Friendless. 

226 Highland Ave. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

158 Whitehall St. 

Augusta: 

Florence Crittenton Home. 

1272 Druid Park Ave. 

Mary Warren Home for the Aged.. 

1589 Broad St. 

Tubman Home. 

Milledgeville Road, R. D. 2. 

Widows’ Home. 

124 Greene St. 

Columbus: 

Florence Crittenton Home. 

720 Front St. 

Macon: 

Door of Hope. 

658 Arch St. 

Home for the Friendless.. 

266 Maple St. 


Grand Lodge of Colored Ma¬ 
sons. . 

Friendship Baptist Church. 

Central Presbyterian Church 

State of Georgia. 

National Florence Critten¬ 
ton Mission. 

ICing’s Daughters and Sons. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Salvation Army. 


National Florence Critten¬ 
ton Mission. 

King’s Daughters. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 


National Florence Critten¬ 
ton Mission. 

Board of City Missions (M. 

E. Church, South). 
Private corporation. 


Widows and orphans of col¬ 
ored Masons. 

Needy aged persons. 

Inebriates, ex-prisoners, and 
homeless men. 

Confederate veterans. 

Fallen women and their in¬ 
fants. 

Incurables. 

Impoverished aged women... 

Friendless women and chil¬ 
dren. 

Homeless unemployed men... 


Fallen women, and children.. 

Dependent aged women. 

Impoverished aged persons... 

Self-sustaining widows and 
children. 

Fallen women. 


Fallen girls and their infants.. 

Friendless women and chil¬ 
dren. 


Year founded. 

Amount of entrance fee asked. 

Amount asked per week. 

Colored persons received. 

1911 




1883 


7 $5. 00 

No. 

1871 



No. 

1902 



No. 

1890 

$200 


No. 

1893 



Yes. 

1862 


62.00 

Yes. 

1890 

7 175 


Yes. 

1906 

200 


No. 

1903 



( 8 ) 

1888 



Yes. 

1901 

( 3 ) 

2 8.00 

(10) 

1851 



Yes. 

1888 

(.8) 

(U) 

No. 

1870 


7 4.00 

No. 

1890 



No. 

1883 



No. 

1899 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

No. 

1888 


(12) 

No. 

1901 

300 


No. 

1898 



No. 

1900 



Yes. 

1897 



(10) 

1908 


7 2.50 

No. 

1901 



No. 

1890 


>5.00 

No. 

1901 


(12) 

No. 

1905 



No. 

1888 



No. 

1906 



( 8 ) 

1907 

35 


No. 

1901 



No. 

1888 



No. 

1871 



No. 

1807 


(12) 

No. 

1896 



No. 

1893 



No. 


o 

© 

CO 


O 
—•+ 

o 


C3 


ft 

a 

® 


•o 

'3 


CL 


1 

16 

5 

6 
3 

14 

6 

3 

9 

3 

3 

497 

29 

9 


7 

1 

6 

2 

2 

2 


3 

( 3 ) 

4 
23 

3 
9 
2 
7 

4 

1 

2 

2 

2 

( 3 ) 


1 


INMATES RECEIVED 
DURING YEAR. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 







2 


2 

7 

3 

4 

2 

1 

1 

5,040 

5,040 


40 

19 

21 

7 

1 

6 

2 


2 

181 

181 


680 

680 


4 

2 

2 

900 

960 


25 

7 

18 

642 


642 

25 

25 


( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

2 


2 

15 


15 

3 

1 

2 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

(*) 

21 

11 

10 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

960 

960 


34 

34 


126 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

51 

22 

29 

25 


25 

262 

40 

222 

198 

198 


40 


40 

3 


3 

1 


1 

3 


3 

( 3 ) 


( 3 ) 

35 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

60 

20 

40 


1 Not opened until 1911. 

2 Per month; no weekly charge. 

* Not reported. 

i Exclusive of proceeds from the institution. 


5 Proceeds of woodvard; covered into treasury. 

6 For those admitted other than through Board of Charities. 

7 Average of maximum and minimum amounts. 

8 No rule against admission. 


























































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


183 


OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


INMATES PRESENT AT CLOSE OF YEAR. 


RECEIPTS 

DURING 

YEAR. 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Adults. 

Children. 

Total. 

Derived from— 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

Total. 

© 

a 

© 

a 

© 

Permanently 

dependent. 

Temporarily 

dependent. 

Wayward or 
delinquent. 

*3 

o 

Eh 

© 

a 

.2 

*3 

a 

© 

Orphan or de¬ 

pendent. 

Received with 

parent. 

Delinquent. 

Appro¬ 

pri¬ 

ations. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources. 
























12 

12 


12 

12 









$1,600 



$700 

M) 

$1,600 

$1,000 

$600 

$30,000 

$30,000 


13 

40 


40 

40 









( 3 ) 




( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

14 

19 

9 

10 

19 









6,345 


$55 

547 

5,743 

4,647 

3,500 

1,147 

32,644 

27,000 

$5,644 

15 

40 

4 

36 

40 









7,663 


7,663 


7,663 

7,663 


75,000 

75,000 

16 

41 

41 



41 








3,850 

4 $3,570 


5 280 

3,858 

3,756 

102 

20,000 

20,000 


17 

5 


5 

5 



90 

54 

36 

90 



11,550 

2,604 

27 

8,068 

851 

10,777 

9, 887 

890 

43,602 

27,602 

16,000 

18 

30 

3 

27 

30 








15,877 

8,287 

1,125 

6,465 

8,264 

8,264 


57,285 

19,985 

37,300 

19 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 









3,767 


665 


3,102 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

20,000 

20,000 

20 

38 

38 

38 








19,222 




19,222 

16,875 

16,875 

9 4,244 

9 4,244 


21 

21 

21 



21 








5,920 

5,920 




5,920 

5,920 


9 700 

9 700 


22 

9 

2 

• 7 

9 









1,211 

851 

360 


1,211 

531 

*•>80 

10.000 

10,000 


23 

1,424 

1,424 


1,424 









n 725,225 




H725,225 

655,923 

390,555 

265,368 

7,820,963 

4,386,699 

3,434,264 

24 

53 

11 

42 

53 



6 

4 

2 

6 



18,960 

4,716 

4,276 

4,955 

5,013 

18,266 

18,266 

108,000 

108,000 


25 

50 


50 

8 

1 3 42 







9,013 

250 

8,213 

550 

8,986 

8,338 

648 

55,000 

45,000 

10,000 

26 

22 

22 


22 









5,000 

4,500 


500 

4,800 

3,600 

1,200 

25,000 

25,000 

1 

( 3 ) 


m 

( 3 \ 

( a ) 


052 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 > 

( 3 ) 


2,608 


i, 165 


1,443 

3,289 

2,263 

1)026 

27,000 

15,000 

12,000 

2 

17 


17 

17 




7,656 



1,371 

6,285 

4,937 

4,937 

50,000 

50,000 

3 

9 


9 

9 



10 


10 

9 

1 


1,051 

100 


250 

701 

642 

592 

50 

5,000 

5,000 


4 

9 

2 

7 

9 








( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

5 

31 


31 



31 

11 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

11 



4,544 

1,200 

620 

24 

2,700 

4,539 

3,949 

590 

16,000 

16,000 


6 






17 

6 

11 

17 



2,800 

2,500 


300 

2,800 

2,000 

800 

40,000 

40,000 


1 

(3) 

( 3 ) 

( a ) 

( a ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 






( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 > 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

2 

25 

25 

25 







5,537 


1,740 

3,797 


5,537 

5,537 


1,000 

1,000 


3 

113 

113 


113 








25,000 

25,000 



25,000 

25,000 


( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


4 

21 


21 


21 

11 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


11 


3,259 

2,200 

32 

900 

127 

3,320 

3,156 

164 

10,000 

10,000 


5 

26 

8 

18 

26 






6,333 

2,692 

922 

1,760 

959 

6,783 

6, 739 

44 

20,000 

20,000 


6 

20 


20 

20 









1,410 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 



1,330 

1,330 


17,000 

15,000 

2,000 

7 

19 


19 


iq 


M 76 

14 15 

u 61 

76 



7,133 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

7,602 

7,602 


25,000 

25,000 


8 

23 

23 


23 


• 





9,354 

9,354 

9,935 

9,935 


9 1,531 

9 1,531 


9 

4 

4 


4 

o 

2 


1 

1 


475 

300 

175 



1,067 

1,067 


3,000 

3,000 


10 

5 


5 

5 









4,184 


15 3,624 

560 


970 

760 

210 

11,604 

4,000 

7,604 

11 

43 

10 

33 

43 









5,000 




5,000 

5,400 

4,800 

600 

132,500 

40,000 

92,500 

12 

34 

34 

34 


c; 

4 

1 


5 


775 


150 


625 

1,364 

764 

600 

31,610 

21,000 

10,610 

13 

m 


(3\ 



(*) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


( 3 ) 


( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

c 3 ) 

5,000 

5,000 


14 

\ / 

1 4 


V / 

14 



\ ) 

14 

11 

4 

7 


11 


1,565 


1,565 



1,463 

1,447 

16 

8,000 

8,000 


15 

4 


4 

4 







980 

480 

500 



480 

480 




r 

16 


9 Equipment. 13 Includes 30 boarders. 

10 Colored only. 14 Segregation estimated. 

11 Includes deduction from soldiers’ pay. 15 Exclusive of donations other than cash. 

12 According to ability to pay. 
































































































































































































Institution number. 


184 BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table III.—HOMES FOR THE CARE OF ADULTS 


17 

18 

19 

20 

21 

22 

23 

24 

25 

26 


5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 
21 
22 

23 

24 

25 

26 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


GEO R GI A—Continued. 

M acon— Continued. 

Julia Parkman Jones Benevolent Home. 
512 Walnut St. 

Masonic Home of Georgia. 


Nellie Troutman Home. 

207 Rogers Ave. 

Tabernacle Rescue Home. 

565 Montpelier Ave. 

Savannah: 

Abrahams Home. 

East Broad and Broughton Sts. 

Florence Crittenton Home. 

R. D. 1. 

Home for the Aged. 

Thirty-seventh and Lincoln Sts. 

Louisa Porter Home. 

Drayton and Charlton Sts. 

May Telfair Home. 

President and West Broad Sts. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home... 
409 Liberty St. 

IDAHO. 

Boise: 

Idaho Soldiers’ Home. 


ILLINOIS. 

Alton: 

Alton Woman’s Home. 

North State St. 

Nazareth Home. 

Central Ave. 

Arlington Heights: 

Lutheran Old Folks’ Home. 


Aurora: 

Old Ladies’ Home.. 

421 Fifth St. 

Bensenville: 

German Orphanage and Old People’s Home 
Bloomington: 

Jessamine Withers’ Home.. 

North Locust St. 

Champaign: 

Garwood Home. 

Chicago: 

Bethany Home. 

5015 North Paulina St. 

Chicago Foundlings’ Home. 

15 South Wood St. 

Chicago Home for Convalescent Women and 
Children. 

1516 West Adams St. 

Chicago Home for the Friendless. 

5051 Vincennes Ave. 

Chicago Industrial School for Girls. 

4900 Prairie Ave. 

Chicago Refuge for Girls. 

5024 Indiana Ave. 

Chicago Rest Cottage. 

4356 Lowell Ave. 

Church Home for Aged Persons. 

4325 Ellis Ave. 

Colored Old Folks’ Home. 

510 West Garfield Boulevard. 

Danish Old People’s Home . 

Norwood Park. 

Florence Crittenton Anchorage. 

2615 Indiana Ave. 

German Baptist Deaconess and Girls’ Home. 
1646 Superior St. 

German Baptist Old People’s Home. 

1851 North Spaulding Ave. 

Home for Aged and Orphan Bohemians. 

5061 North Fortieth Ave. 

Home for Aged Jews. 

Sixty-second St. and Drexel Ave. 

Home for the Aged. 

Fullerton and Sheffield Aves. 

Home for the Aged. 

Harrison and Throop Sts. 

Home for the Aged. 

5148 Prairie Ave. 

House of Providence. 

1121 Orleans St. 


Supervised or conducted 
by— 


Class of inmates received. 


Christ Church (Episcopal)... 

Masonic Grand Lodge of 
Georgia. 

King’s Daughters. 


Tabernacle Baptist Church.. 

Savannah Widows’ Society.. 

National Florence Critten¬ 
ton Mission. 

Little Sisters of the Poor.... 

Private organization. 

Savannah Widows’ Society.. 
Salvation Army.. 


State of Idaho. 


Private association. 

St. Mary’s Catholic Church.. 

Private organization (Lu¬ 
theran). 

Private corporation. 

German Evangelical Synod., 
Second Presbyterian Church 
Private corporation. 


Swedish Methodist Episco¬ 
pal Church. 

Private corporation. 


Private corporation. 


Private corporation. 
Private corporation. 
Private corporation. 
Private corporation. 


Protestant Episcopal Dio¬ 
cese of Chicago. 

Private corporation. 


Private corporation. 


National Florence Critten¬ 
ton Mission. 

German Baptist churches... 

German Baptist churches... 

Bohemian Benevolent Asso¬ 
ciations. 

Associated Jewish Charities. 
Little Sisters of the Poor... 
Little Sisters of the Poor..., 
Little Sisters of the Poor.... 
Sisters of St. Francis. 


Indigent aged gentlewomen.. 
Masons and their families.... 
Friendless aged women. 


Fallen women and their in¬ 
fants. 

Indigent aged women. 

Fallen women. 

Destitute aged persons. 

Aged and infirm women. 


Indigent widows with chil¬ 
dren. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 


Veterans and State National 
Guard. 


Dependent aged women_ 

Homeless men and women... 


Homeless aged members of 
the church. 


Aged women. 


Needy aged persons, and or¬ 
phans. 

Aged women. 


Homeless aged women. 
Aged men and women. 


Foundlings, and homeless 
mothers with infants. 
Convalescents. 


Destitute women and chil¬ 
dren. 

Dependent girls committed 
by the juvenile court. 

Erring women and delin¬ 
quent children. 

Fallen women and their in¬ 
fants. 

Aged men and women.. 


Aged men and women. 
Aged Danes.. 


Fallen women and homeless 
children. 

Unemployed deaconesses and 
girls. 

Aged English and Germans.. 

Aged Bohemians and Or¬ 
phans. 

Homeless aged Hebrews. 


3 

3 

E 

3 

O 


05 

Q 


Destitute aged persons. 

Destitute aged persons. 

Destitute aged persons. 

Self-supporting young women. 


1886 

1904 

1886 

1908 

1822 

1902 

1890 

1875 
1822 
1910 

1894 

1897 

1907 

1892 

1895 

1895 

1902 

1899 

1889 

1871 

1902 

1859 

1889 
1865 
1901 
1888 

1896 

1891 
1886 

1903 
1896 

1893 

1890 
1893 

1876 
1882 
1882 


3 

9 

M 


fl 

CD 

«*—i 

O 

fl 

p 

o 

s 

< 


9 $400 


9 400 


9 400 


9 400 


9 400 
( 12 ) 


9 400 


© 


P4 

© 

3 

fl 

3 

o 

a 


( 2 ) 


* 84.00 
(*) 


10 4.00 
5.00 


ii 1.00 

4.00 


(13) 


(16) 

2.50 


8 250 



18 4.50 

400 


300 

'V 

( I7 ) 

300 



■3 

<o 

> 

'© 

1 

hi 

a 

i 

(m 

© 

Ph 

© 

C 

£ 

o 

O 


o 

© 

o 

"o 

03 

W t 

8i 
&' 
p. 

a 

3 

'3 

Ch 


3.50 


No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

Yes. 

No. 

No. 

( 7 ) 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

Yes. 

No. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

No. 

No. 

Yes. 

No. 

Yes. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

No. 


1 Equipment. 

2 Inmates self-supporting; rent free. 

2 Includes report of May Telfair Home. 
* Per month; no weekly charge. 

6 Not reported. 


6 Included in report of Abrahams Home. 

7 No rule against admission. 

e Includes $13,000 from U. S. Government, 
s Average of maximum and minimum amounts. 


24 

3 

1 

5 

1 

9 

1 

3 

4 

13 

5 

58 

2 

18 


( 6 ) 


INMATES RECEIVED 
DURING YEAR. 



© 


© 

a 

Eh 

a 

Pjh 




4 

2 

2 

4 


4 

105 


105 

6 


6 

28 


28 

21 

8 

13 

( s ) 

( 6 ) 

( 5 ) 

( 5 ) 

M 

( 6 > 

16 

16 


43 

43 


1 


1 

4 


4 

14 

9 

5 

15 

9 

6 

1 


1 

5 


5 

8 

2 

6 

450 

103 

347 

234 


234 

1,866 

( 6 ) 

( 5 ) 

216 


216 

78 


78 

52 

5 

47 

6 

2 

4 

3 

1 

2 

( 6 ) 

( 5 ) 

( 6 ) 

110 

20 

90 

7 

2 

5 

44 

20 

24 

9 

4 

5 

200 

100 

100 

212 

112 

100 

219 

119 

100 

1,723 


1,723 




























































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


185 


OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


INMATES PRESENT AT CLOSE OF YEAR. 


8 

12 

5 

15 

42 

10 

66 

14 

( 6 ) 

10 

177 

18 

16 

75 

10 

16 


13 

36 

56 

209 

u 30 


16 

38 

20 

25 

12 


85 

23 

68 

200 

212 

219 

98 


Adults. 


© 

a 


35 


( 6 ) 

10 


177 


3 

43 


( 6 ) 


( 6 ) 


30 

11 

33 

100 

112 

119 


8 

10 

5 

15 

42 

10 

31 

14 

( 5 ) 


18 

13 

32 

10 


13 

29 
56 

( 6 ) 

30 


16 

36 

14 

( 6 ) 

12 


55 

12 

35 

100 

100 

100 


flg 

8^2 
§S 
a & 
© 

Ph 


*2 © 
° C 

CL © 
c? Ph 
a © 

© Td 


8 

11 

5 


42 


66 

14 


( 5 ) 


177 

6 

15 

75 

10 

16 


13 

36 


38 

20 

25 


85 

23 

68 

200 

212 

219 


c 

T3 © 

c3 © 


( 6 ) 

10 


12 

1 


56 

209 

30 


15 


10 


( 5 ) 


8 

8 

16 


11 


Children. 


o 


29 


20 


( 5 ) 


79 


55 
71 

14 183 
184 
105 
3 


19 


'aJ 

a 


12 


( 5 ) 


45 


32 

( 6 ) 

( s ) 


*3 

a 

© 


17 


12 


( & ) 


34 


23 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

184 

105 


10 


<t> 

. 

© £3 
Z. © 
fl TJ 
2 £3 

O 


27 


19 


( 5 ) 


( 5 ) 


79 


23 

71 

183 

184 


19 


32 


105 


Total. 


S3,000 
6,800 
1,000 
950 

3 6,747 
1,941 
27,651 
1,620 
( 6 ) 

785 

8 31,000 

1,988 

1,548 

10,369 

2,079 

17,017 

940 

4,003 

9,301 

9,505 

5,711 

38,814 

( 5 ) 
27,918 
1,751 
8,003 
1,333 

( 5 ) 
4,366 
3,199 
10,850 
25,444 
22,138 
( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 
7,968 

( 6 ) 


10 Per month; for county charges. 

11 For orphans only. 

12 All property owned. 

13 Varies. 


RECEIPTS 

DURING 

YEAR. 


Derived from— 

Appro- 

Dona- 

Care of 

Other 

pn- 

ations. 

tions. 

in¬ 

mates. 

sources. 




$3,000 




6,800 


$300 


700 


600 

$200 

150 

$1,000 

100 


5,647 

625 

237 


1,079 


10,970 


16,681 


200 

420 

1,000 

c) 

(•) 


( s ) 




785 

8 28,000 



3,000 

461 

217 

940 

370 

288 

300 

960 



2,264 


8,105 


1,655 


424 


12,165 

2,868 

1,984 


550 


390 



1,500 

2,503 


4,700 


4,601 


2,187 

45 

7,273 


5,661 

47 

3 


6,703 


32,111 

<•> 

( 6 ) 

( s ) 

( B ) 

12,444 

6,745 

350 

8,379 


400 


1,351 


4,700 

1,986 

1,317 


538 

300 

495 

( 6 ) 

<») 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 


4,366 




2,272 


927 

4,500 

5,150 


1,200 


20,746 

4,698 



22,138 



( 6 ) 


( 6 ) 


( 6 ) 


( 5 ) 


( 6 ) 


( 6 ) 


300 

( 6 ) 

m 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 


Total. 


$2,500 

6,800 

900 

950 

3 4,222 
1,394 
26,596 
1,204 
( 6 ) 

2,699 

39,000 

1,933 

1,750 

8,004 

2,023 

15,117 

825 

2,516 

9,301 

9,708 

12,437 

38,072 

( 5 ) 
23,520 
1,085 
6,870 
1,724 

( 6 ) 
3,085 
3,002 
10,500 
16,677 
21,770 
( 5 ) 

( 6 ) 
7,968 
14,000 


For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 


$1,800 

6,800 

600 

950 

4,222 

1,253 

26,596 

1,143 

( 6 ) 

2,699 

30,000 

1,833 

1,450 

7,326 

2,023 

9,591 

800 

2,516 
6,051 
9,708 
4,959 

38,072 

( 6 ) 
21,139 
722 
6,870 
1,620 

( 6 ) 
3,085 
2,616 
7,500 
4,207 
21,770 
( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 
7,968 
12,000 


For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 


$700 


300 


141 


61 


9,000 

100 

300 

678 


5,526 


3,250 

7,478 


2,381 

363 


104 


( 5 ) 


2,000 


14 Estimated 

15 From $5 to $10 per month. 

18 For girls. 

17 From $1.50 to $2.50 for orphans. 


VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

$55,000 

$15,000 

$40,000 

17 

40,000 

40,000 


18 

4,000 

4,000 


19 

1 300 

1 300 


20 

3 137,000 

10,000 

127,000 

21 

5,000 

5,000 


22 

60,000 

60,000 


23 

37,000 

20,000 

17,000 

24 

(*) 

(•) 

(«) 

25 

i 1,294 

i 1,294 


26 

93,000 

93,000 


1 

23,950 

21,000 

2,950 

1 

18,000 

18,000 


2 

86,379 

35,000 

51,379 

3 

17,450 

10,000 

7,450 

4 

38,000 

35,000 

3,000 

5 

32,000 

25,000 

7,000 

6 

77,525 

17,500 

60,025 

7 

83,000 

42,000 

41,000 

8 

168,157 

50,000 

118,157 

9 

20,000 

20,000 


10 

900,000 

250,000 

650,000 

11 

( 6 ) 

( 5 ) 


12 

200,000 

175,000 

25,000 

13 

12,000 

12,000 


14 

59,364 

29,000 

32,364 

15 

2,200 

2,200 


16 

35,000 

( 5 ) 

C) 

17 

13,500 

13,500 


18 

8,000 

7,000 

1,000 

19 

85,000 

75,000 

10,000 

20 

75,257 

62,257 

13,000 

21 

402,000 

225,000 

177,000 

22 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 


23 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 


24 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 


25 

180,000 

180,000 


26 


















































































































































































































186 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table III.—HOMES FOR THE CARE OF ADULTS 



S 

3 

fl 

c 


o 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


Supervised or conducted 
by— 


Class of inmates received. 


T3 

a> 

33 

a 



ILLIN OIS—Continued. 


27 

28 

29 

30 

31 

32 

33 

34 

35 

36 

37 

38 

39 

40 

41 

42 

43 

44 


45 


46 


Chicago— Continued. 

House of the Good Shepherd. 

1126 Grace St. 

Immanuel Woman’s Home. 

1505 La Salle Ave. 

McKinley Home. 

501 Ashland Boulevard. 

Methodist Episcopal Old People’s Home.... 
1415 Foster Ave. 

Municipal Lodging House. 

162 North Union St. 

Norwegian Old People’s Home. 

6058 Avondale Ave. 

Old People’s Home. 

Forty-seventh St. and Vincennes Ave. 

Olivet Institute Old People’s Home. 

668 Gardner St. 

St. Anthony’s Home. 

2033 Frankfort St. 

St. Joseph’s Home for Aged and Crippled 
and St. Vincent Orphan Asylum. 

2649 North Hamlin Ave. (Logan Square 
Station). 

St. Joseph’s Home for the Friendless. 

1100 South May St. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

832 Washington Boulevard. 

Salvation Army Rescue Home. 

1332 La Salle Ave. 

Susanna Wesley Home for Scandinavian 
Young Women. 

3330 Indiana Ave. 

Swedish Home of Mercy. 

2739 Foster Ave. 

Washingtonian Home of Chicago. 

1533 West Madison St. 

Women’s Model Lodging House. .. 

3040 Calumet Ave. 

Danville: 

National Home for Disabled Volunteer Sol¬ 
diers. 

Decatur: 

Anna B. Milliken Home and Macon County 
Industrial School for Girls. 

200 North Oakland Ave. 

Illinois Pythian Home. 


Sisters of the Good Shepherd. 

Private corporation (Lu¬ 
theran). 

Volunteers of America. 

Methodist Episcopal Church. 

City of Chicago. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Olivet Memorial Presbyte¬ 
rian Church. 

Polish Catholic Church. 

Sisters of St. Francis. 


Sisters of the Immaculate 
Heart of Mary. 

Salvation Army. 

Salvation Army. 

Methodist Episcopal Church. 


Swedish Evangelical Mission 
Covenant. 

Private corporation. 

Women’s Clubs of Cook 
County. 

U. S. Government. 


Private corporation 


Knights of Pythias 


47 

48 

49 

50 

51 

52 

53 


East St. Louis: 

Salvation Army Industrial Home 
428 Broadway. 

Elgin: 

Old People’s Home. 


State St. 

Evanston: 

Grove House for Convalescents. 

1729 Livingston Ave. 

Old People’s Home. 

Pioneer Road and Grant St. 

Forest Park: 

German Old People’s Home... 

i Girard: 

The Home.. 

Highland Park: 

Home for Aged and Disabled Railroad Em¬ 
ployees of America. 


54 


Hinsdale: 

Life Boat Rescue Home. 


Salvation Army. 


Private corporation 


Private corporation 
Swedish Societies.. 


Private corporation. 

Church of the Brethren. 

Brotherhoods of Locomotive 
Engineers, Firemen, and 
Enginemen, Order of R. 
R. Conductors and Broth- 
hood of R. R. Trainmen. 

Private corporation. 


55 

56 

57 

58 

59 


Jacksonville: 

Old People’s Home. 

873 Grove St. 

Joliet: 

Salem Home for the Aged. 

Rowell Ave. 

Salvation Armv Industrial Home 
113 South Joliet St. 
Libertyville: 

Colony Association. 

Milwaukee Ave. 

Macon: 

Eastern Star and Masonic Home. 


National Benevolent Asso¬ 
ciation of Christian Church. 

Lutheran Augustana Synod. 

Salvation Army. 

Private corporation. 

Order of the Eastern Star.... 


Delinquent girls. 

Unemployed working wo¬ 
men. 

Self-supporting young wo¬ 
men with small wage. 

Helpless aged members of the 
church. 

Homeless unemployed men 
and boys. 

Aged men and women. 

Aged women. 

Aged poor persons. 

Homeless men, women, and 
orphans. 

Aged persons, dependent chil¬ 
dren, and cripples. 


Young working girls. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 

Fallen women and their in¬ 
fants. 

Convalescent young women 
seeking employment. 

Dependent aged persons. 

Inebriates. 

Needy women and children.. 


Disabled volunteer soldiers 
and sailors. 

Aged women and orphan 
girls. 

Knights of Pythias and their 
families. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 


Aged men and women 


Convalescent women and 
children. 

Aged Swedes. 


Aged Germans. 

Aged persons and needy chil¬ 
dren. 

Aged and disabled railway 
employees. 


Homeless women, fallen girls, 
and their infants. 

Aged members of the church. 

Aged Swedes. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 


Persons with epileptic, ner¬ 
vous, and mental diseases.. 

Eastern Stars, and Masons’ 
wives, daughters, sisters, 
and widows. 


1859 

1907 

1903 

1898 
1901 

1896 
1873 
1903 

1897 
1895 

1876 

1899 
1895 
1907 

1886 

1863 

1893 

1865 

1892 

1906 

1899 

1901 

1902 

1900 

1885 

1905 

1890 


1893 

1900 

1905 

1899 

1902 

1896 


Amount of entrance fee asked. 

Amount asked per week. 

Colored persons received. 

Paid employees at close of 

year. 

INMATES RECEIVED 
DURING YEAR. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 



No. 


295 


295 


1 $3. 75 

No. 

3 

391 


391 


3.50 

No. 

5 

1,107 


1,107 

$300 


No. 

12 

13 


13 


Yes. 

4 

12,104 

12,104 


300 


No. 

8 

36 

13 

23 

300 


No. 

16 

4 


4 

1250 


No. 

2 

5 

2 

3 



No. 

4 

5 

4 

1 

( 3 ) 

11.50 

Yes. 


66 

37 

29 


13.50 

Yes. 

5 

233 


233 


( 3 ) 

43 

487 

487 




Yes. 

7 

239 

57 

182 


( 2 ) 

No. 

1 

250 


250 


5.00 

No. 

27 

12 

4 

8 

7 20 


No. 

24 

1,061 

920 

141 


1.00 

No. 

2 

727 


727 



Yes. 

480 

995 

995 


9 540 

(“) 

No. 

3 

53 


53 



No. 

12 

39 

24 

15 



( 3 ) 

(5) 

(f) 

( 5 ) 


500 


Yes. 

4 

3 

1 

2 


15.00 

No. 

6 

237 


237 

( ll ) 


No. 

4 

12 

4 

8 

300 


No. 

20 

35 

21 

14 


13.13 

Yes. 

4 

8 

4 

4 



No. 

12 

16 

16 



i 3.00 

Yes. 

2 

36 


36 

100 


No. 

6 

8 

2 

6 

500 


No. 

4 

28 

4 

24 










( 3 ) 

3 

17 

17 



5.00 

No. 

2 

( 5 ) 

( 5 ) 

( 5 ) 



No. 

8 

7 


7 









1 Average of maximum and minimum amounts. 

2 According to ability to pay. 

3 No rule against admission. 


* Equipment. 

2 Not reported. 

6 Included in report of Swedish Covenant Hospital. 









































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


187 


OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


INMATES PRESENT AT CLOSE OF YEAR. 


o 


09 

a 


316 

24 

25 
56 

349 

86 

72 

15 

13 

68 

130 

no 

21 

(•) 

61 

46 

58 

2,428 

4 

9 

(*) 

21 

( 5 ) 

45 

120 

20 

44 


36 

30 

29 

6 

1 

32 


20 


5 

4 

31 


no 


2,428 


( 6 ) 


13 


Adults. 

Children. 

Total. 

Female. 

Permanently 

dependent. 

Temporarily 

dependent. 

Wayward or 
delinquent. 

o 

£ 

q 

a 

Female. 

Orphan or de¬ 

pendent. 

Received with 

parent. 

Delinquent. 

316 



316 







$75,409 

24 


24 



• 





4,543 

25 


25 








4,398 

52 

56 









18,669 



349 








7,000 

66 

86 









22,630 

72 

72 









324,508 

10 

15 









1,161 

9 

13 



6 

5 

1 

6 



2,684 

37 

68 



90 

51 

39 

90 



28,094 

130 


130 








30,305 



no 








40,991 

21 


3 

18 

11 

5 

6 

11 



7,343 

( 5 ) 


c) 








2,000 

35 

61 








(«) 

10 


46 








31,357 

58 


58 


4 


4 


4 

... 

m 


2,428 









374,449 

4 

4 



35 


35 

35 



4,248 

2 

9 



28 

16 

12 

28 



18,300 



C) 








6,105 

19 

21 








5,685 

« 

( 5 ) 

( 6 ) 

« 


c) 

( s ) 

<•> 

( s > 

( 5 ) 

6,471 

32 

45 









17,618 

64 

6 

114 








54,296 

13 

13 

5 

2 

3 

2 

1 

1 

.... 

2 

3,275 


44 









27,604 

36 


36 

15 

7 

8 

15 



3,433 

27 

30 









5,500 

24 

29 









9,524 

6 








5,520 


1 



1 

1 


1 



( 5 ) 

31 

32 









13,965 










RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 


Derived from— 


Appro¬ 

pri¬ 

ations. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources. 


$8,561 


$66,848 


1,199 

$3,344 


569 

3,829 


$7,000 

6,242 

4,765 

7,662 


13 126 

9 504 


233,828 

850 

89,830 


1,011 

150 



2,684 




14,205 

4,114 

9,775 


8,499 

9,384 

12,422 




40,991 


3,524 

1,498 

2,321 


200 

1,400 

400 


(«) 

(*) 

( s ) 


40 

21,390 

9,927 


« 

1,762 

90 

8 366,225 



8,224 

240 

2,354 

539 

1,115 


18,000 


300 



6,105 


100 


5,585 



421 

6,050 


1,757 

10,450 

5,411 


31,307 

9,930 

13,059 


475 

2,800 



27,604 



1,625 

1,531 

277 


4,325 


1,175 


6,619 

2,905 



5,520 



( s ) 

( 5 ) 

969 


12,996 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 


VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 


Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

$75,207 

$75,207 


$45,205 

$45,205 


4,853 

4,853 


7,500 

7,500 


4 303 

4,303 



12,232 

12,232 


138,782 

40,000 

$98,782 

7,000 

7,000 


30,000 

30,000 


40,425 

7,026 

$33,399 

75,000 

75,000 


334,597 

18,109 

316,488 

779,093 

335,026 

444,067 

1,749 

1,749 





2,684 

2,426 

258 

10,000 

10,000 


32,162 

24,312 

7,850 

75,900 

75,900 


29,921 

15,384 

14,537 

75,000 

75,000 


38,894 

36,690 

2,204 

4 12,829 

4 12,829 


6,989 

6,989 


2,500 

4 1,500 

1,000 

2,000 

2,000 





(«) 

( 6 ) 

c«) 

( 6 ) 

(») 


29,420 

24,750 

4,670 

348,900 

250,000 

98,900 

3 000 

3,000 


1,500 


1,500 

354,693 

344,887 

9,806 

1,372,906 

1,372,906 


4,131 

3,526 

605 

43,419 

41,219 

2,200 

18,000 

9,000 

9,000 

400,000 

200,000 

200,000 

5,725 

5,609 

116 

4 158 

4 158 


6,499 

6,053 

446 

130,103 

48,857 

81,246 

6 274 

6,274 


12,000 

12,000 


4 169 

4,169 


50,000 

50,000 


52,296 

17,839 

34,457 

310,470 

100,000 

210,470 

3,100 

3,100 


25,000 

25,000 


120,419 

16,729 

103,690 

130,089 

121,632 

8,457 

2,953 

2,248 

705 

14,933 

14,933 


5,500 

5,500 


27,500 

20,000 

7,500 

7 259 

7,259 


28,220 

28,220 


5,383 

5,291 

92 

4 750 

4 750 


m 

( s ) 





16,555 

6,922 

9,633 

53,500 

50,000 

3,500 


rO 

a 

3 

3 

3 

o 


27 

28 

29 

30 

31 

32 

33 

34 

35 

36 

37 

38 

39 

40 

41 

42 

43 

44 

45 

46 

47 

48 

49 

50 

51 

52 

53 


54 

55 

56 

57 

58 

59 


7 Includes medical treatment and board for two weeks, 
s From U. S. Government, 
s For women only. 


10 From 50 cents to $1 for girls only. 

11 All property owned. 




































































































































































































































Institution number. 


188 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table III.—HOMES FOR THE CARE OF ADULTS 



60 

61 

62 

63 

64 

65 

66 

67 

68 

69 

70 

71 

72 

73 

74 

75 

76 

77 

78 

79 

80 

81 

82 

83 

84 

85 

86 

87 

88 


ILLINOIS—Continued. 

Mattoon: 

Odd Fellows’ Home of Illinois.. 


Maywood: 

Baptist Old People’s Home. 

Morgan Park: 

Swedish Baptist Home for the Aged. 
1140 Crescent Ave. 

Mount Morris: 

Old People and Orphans’ Home. 


Ohio: 

Mercy Home. 

Park Ridge: 

Illinois Industrial School for Girls. 


Peoria: 

Florence Crittenton Home. 

415 Richmond Ave. 

Guyer Memorial Home. 

703 Knoxville Ave. 

House of the Good Shepherd. 

517 Starr St. 

John C. Proctor Endowment Home. 

Spring St. and Glendale Ave. 

St. Joseph’s Home for the Aged. 

405 Smith St. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

901 State St. 

Quincy: 

Anna Brown Home for the Aged. 

1507 North Fifth St. 

Illinois Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Home. 

Lindsay Church Home. 

234 North Fourth St. 

Old People’s Home. 

418 Washington St. 

St. Vincent Home. 

1340 North Tenth St. 

Riverside: 

Scottish Old People’s Home. 

Rockford: 

Jennie Snow Home for Aged Women.... 
525 Kent St. 

Winnebago County Home for the Aged. 
408 North Horsman St. 

Rock Island: 

Prince Hall Masonic Home. 


Springfield: 

King’s Daughters’ Home for Women. 
541 Black Ave. 

Lincoln Colored Home. 

427 South Twelfth St. 

St. Joseph’s Home. 

801 South Sixth St. 

Springfield Redemption Home. 

427 South Eleventh St. 

Sullivan: 

Illinois Masonic Home. 


Techny: 

St. Ann’s Home.. 
Wilmington: 

Soldiers’ Widows’ 


Home of Illinois. 


Woodstock: 

Old People’s Rest Home. 
Glen Ellyn P. O. 

INDIANA. 

A villa: 

Old People’s Home. 


Evansville: 

Home for the Aged. 

Lincoln Ave. 

Home for the Friendless. 

2215 Fulton Ave. , 

Rathbone Memorial Home for Aged and 
Infirm. 

Salvation Armv Industrial Home. 

230 High St. 

Fort Wayne: 

Rescue Home and Mission. 

118 East Columbia St. 

Salvation Armv Industrial Home. 

231 West Main St. 


Supervised or conducted 
by— 


Independent Order of Odd 
Fellows. 


Private corporation (Baptist) 
Swedish Baptists of America. 

Church of the Brethren_ 


Sisters of Mercy_ 

Private corporation. 


National Florence Critten¬ 
ton Mission. 

Private corporation. 


Sisters of the Good Shepherd. 

Trustees of John C. Proctor 
Endowment. 

Sisters of St. Francis. 


Salvation Army. 


Private corporation. 


State of Illinois. 

Episcopal churches of 
Quincy. 

German Conference M. E. 
Church. 

Sisters, Poor Handmaids of 
Jesus Christ. 

Illinois St. Andrew Society.. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 


Grand Lodge of Colored 
Masons. 


King’s Daughters 
Private corporation.. 
Sisters of St. Francis. 
Private corporation.. 


Masonic Grand Lodge of 
Illinois. 

Sisters of the Holy Ghost... 
State of Illinois.. 


Free Methodist Church. 



Aged Odd Fellows, their 
wives and widows, and 
Rebekahs. 

Aged men and women. 

Aged and needy Swedes. 


Homeless, destitute aged per¬ 
sons, and orphans. 

Aged men and women. 


Dependent girls committed 
by the juvenile court. 

Fallen girls and women, and 
dependent children. 

Impoverished aged persons... 

Fallen women and unpro¬ 
tected young girls. 

Worthy aged persons. 


Homeless aged persons. 

Homeless unemployed men. 

Aged men and women. 


Veterans and their wives. 

Aged members of the church. 

Aged members of the church. 

Aged persons. 


Aged Scotch persons. 

Aged women.. 

Dependent aged persons. 


Colored Masons and their 
families. 

Dependent worthy aged 
women. 

Aged women, dependent and 
delinquent children. 

Aged men and women. 


Franciscan Sisters of the 
Sacred Heart. 

Little Sisters of the Poor 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Salvation Army. 

Private corporation. 

Salvation Army. 


Fallen women, their infants, 
and illegitimate children. 

Masons and their families... 


Worthy aged persons. 


Wives, widows, mothers, and 
daughters of veterans. 

Homeless aged persons. 


Aged men and women. 


Dependent aged persons. 


Fallen women and their in¬ 
fants . 

Aged women. 


Homeless unemployed men.. 

Unemployed men.. 

Homeless unemployed men. 


1898 

1907 

1903 

1893 

1904 
1877 

1992 

1889 

1891 

1905 

1892 

1899 

1898 

1885 

1873 

1S90 

1885 

1S46 

1906 
1904 

1893 

1893 

1898 

1903 

1903 

1904 

1902 

1895 

1904 

1896 

1882 

1869 

1884 

1905 

1902 

1906 


Amount of entrance fee asked. 

Amount asked per week. 

Colored persons received. 

Paid employees at close of 

year. 

inmates received 
DURING YEAR. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 



No. 

21 

28 

18 

10 

$500 


No. 

2 

2 


2 

1225 


No. 

2 

5 

2 

3 



No. 

4 

6 

2 

4 

( s ) 

$5.00 

No. 

2 

5 

1 

4 



Yes. 

13 

45 


45 

( a ) 


No. 

1 

57 

16 

41 

500 


No. 

2 

2 


2 



No. 

2 

62 


62 

4 400 


No. 

19 

( 8 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 


i 4.50 

No. 

4 

34 

14 

20 



( e ) 

2 

16 

16 


500 


No. 

6 

2 


2 



Yes. 

391 

549 

441 

108 



No. 





300 


No. 

9 

5 

4 

1 


( 8 ) 

No. 

3 

41 

20 

21 


5.00 

No. 

4 

6 

2 

4 

200 


No. 

3 

4 

2 

2 

300 


( 9 ) 

2 

5 

2 

3 



Yes. 

3 

1 

1 


( 10 ) 


No. 

4 




u 25 


Yes. 

2 

16 

6 

10 

( 8 ) 


No. 

1 

12 

5 

7 



No. 


106 


106 



No. 

16 

20 

14 

6 



No. 


19 

7 

12 



Yes. 

23 

29 


29 

800 


(») 

2 

1 


1 

( 8 ) 


Yes. 

2 

9 

6 

3 

C 


Yes. 


38 

22 

16 



No. 

2 

112 


112 

300 


No. 

5 

2 


2 



(«) 

2 

47 

47 



(.2) 

No. 

( 6 ) 

<•> 

( 6 ) 




(•> 

2 

74 

74 


1 







1 Average of maximum and minimum amounts. 

2 Varies. 

3 Confinement fee, $25 if able. 


4 And all property owned. 

5 Not reported. 

6 No rule against admission. 









































































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


189 


OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


INMATES PRESENT AT CLOSE OF YEAR. 


RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 


Adults. 

Children. 

Total. 

Derived from— 

Total. 

.2 

*03 

s 

Female. 

Permanently 

dependent. 

Temporarily 

dependent. 

Wayward or 
delinquent. 

Total. 

© 

s 

Female. 

Orphan or de¬ 

pendent. 

Received with 

parent. 

Delinquent. 

Appro¬ 

pri¬ 

ations. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources. 

110 

88 

22 

110 









$30,397 


$29,315 


$1,082 

8 

1 

7 

8 









1,500 


1,200 


300 

26 

10 

16 

26 









15,177 



$4,000 

11,177 

18 

7 

11 

18 









2,685 


2,6S5 


20 

10 

10 

20 









4,321 


478 

3,529 

314 







147 


147 

147 



40,075 

$10,000 

6,000 

24,075 

14 


14 



14 

23 

17 

6 

13 

10 


1,563 

349 

490 

724 

11 

3 

8 

11 









4,886 


250 

1,500 

3,136 

31 


31 

4 

27 


103 


103 

44 


59 

12,987 

920 

4,010 

8,057 

148 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

148 









( 5 ) 


( 5 ) 

( 5 ) 

107 

39 

68 

107 









13,368 


1,200 

8,768 

3,400 

4 

4 



4 








4,316 



4,316 

20 

4 

16 

20 









8,992 


5,248 


3,744 

1 772 

1,597 

175 

1 772 









223,591 

223,591 


3 

1 

2 

3 









( 5 ) 


(&) 

( 5 ) 

56 

17 

39 

56 









16,778 


12,974 

1,500 

2,304 

87 

43 

44 

87 









10,554 

554 

3,000 

7,000 

19 

10 

9 

19 









4,292 


464 

3,828 

8 

8 

8 









8,631 



203 

8,428 

12 

3 

9 

12 









10,875 


2,432 


8,443 

5 

3 

2 

5 









700 


300 


400 

19 


19 

19 

8 









4,680 


410 


4,270 

11 


11 

1 

Q 

11 


11 

4 

2 

5 

3,872 

1,000 

172 

1,746 

954 

40 

15 

25 

40 









9,194 


790 

8,404 


83 

83 


83 

47 

23 

24 

47 



4,104 

332 

3,772 


90 

65 

25 

90 



1 

1 


1 



23,296 


23,296 



80 

35 

45 

80 









11,801 


2,500 

7,301 

2,000 

79 

79 

79 









22,500 

22,500 

iq 

3 

10 

13 









1,942 

533 

96 

1,313 

49 

O 4 

18 

42 









4,623 


900 

3,723 

QO 

56 

86 

92 









( & ) 


300 

100 

( 6 ) 

33 



33 







2,729 

1,200 



1,529 

15 


15 

15 








6,700 


600 

6,100 

A 

a 

A 








2,921 




2,921 

(k\ 












(*) 


( s ) 

( 6 ) 

(*) 

V. ) 

7 

v ) 

7 



k ) 

7 








3,056 


3,056 

















PAYMENTS DURING 

YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

| Institution number. 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

$24,816 

$2,500 

$22,316 

$188,500 

$148,500 

$40,000 

60 

1,500 

1,500 


14,500 

5,000 

9,500 

61 

14,924 

3,968 

10,956 

22,565 

22,565 


62 

2,199 

2,199 


32,000 

32,000 


63 

3,796 

3,632 

164 

15,000 

15,000 


64 

40,075 

21,075 

19,000 

260,000 

125,000 

135,000 

65 

1,193 

933 

260 

15,000 

15,000 


66 

2,796 

2,796 


54,100 

28,000 

26,100 

67 

12,989 

11,695 

1,294 

71,000 

71,000 


68 

( 6 ) 

o 

( 5 ) 

c) 

( 6 ) 

(*) 

69 

10,548 

9,748 

800 

75,000 

75,000 


70 

4 032 

4 032 


7 1,153 

7 1,153 


71 

6,137 

6,137 


115,700 

64,000 

51,700 

72 

223 591 

223,591 


860,000 

860,000 


73 

216 

216 


o 

( 6 > 


74 

10,636 

7,923 

2,713 

78,739 

45,000 

33,739 

75 

10,260 

7,460 

2,800 

52,000 

52,000 


76 

4 491 

4,491 


35,686 

35,686 


77 

6,604 

6,604 


125,000 

15,000 

110,000 

78 

1,800 

1,800 


25,400 

12,000 

13,400 

79 

700 

700 


10,000 

10,000 


80 

4,371 

4,371 


69,450 

40,000 

29,450 

81 

2,887 

2,699 

188 

9,000 

9,000 


82 

10,606 

5,120 

5,486 

45,000 

45,000 


83 

4,104 

3,101 

1,003 

12,000 

12,000 


84 

23,296 

21,086 

2,210 

160,000 

160,000 


85 

5,332 

5,332 


( s ) 

( 6 ) 

(*) 

86 

24,224 

21,597 

2,627 

66,598 

66,598 


87 

1,679 

1,450 

229 

23,889 

23,889 


88 

4,695 

3,795 

900 

60,000 

60,000 


1 

( s ) 

(•) 


50,000 

50,000 


2 

2,729 

2,538 

191 

16,000 

16,000 


3 

5,500 

5,200 

300 

130,000 

30,000 

100,000 

4 

3,042 

3,042 


5,710 

5,710 


5 

(») 

(*) 

(») 

( 5 ) 

(») 

(») 

6 

2,975 

2,975 


7 515 

7 515 


7 







7 Equipment. 

8 According to ability to pay. 

9 Indeterminate. 


10 Residents, $300; nonresidents, $600. 

11 For women. 

i* Night’s lodging, 15 cents. 



























































































































































































































190 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table III.—HOMES FOR THE CARE OF ADULTS 


I 


pQ 

£ 


o 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


Supervised or conducted 
by— 


Class of inmates received. 


'd 

o 

-3 

a 

3 

o 


crt 

3 


INDIAN A—Cont inued. 


QJ 


8 

9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 

21 

22 

23 

24 

25 

26 

27 

28 

29 

30 

31 

32 

33 

34 

35 

36 

37 

38 

39 

40 


Greensburg: 

Odd Fellows’ Home. 

Honey Creek: 

Aged Persons’ Home and Orphan Asylum.. 
Middletown P. O., R. D. 2. 
Indianapolis: 

Alpha Home. 

1940 Darwin St. 

Door of Hope of Indiana. 

1260 Chicago St. 

Faith Home. 

1523 Southeastern Ave. 

Friendly Inn. 

526 West Market St. 

Hartwig-Kalley Home for Aged People. 

2521 Chestnut St. 

Hebrew Ladies’ Shelter House. 

808 South Illinois St. 

Home for the Aged. 

East and Vermont Sts. 

House of the Good Shepherd. 

Ill West Raymond St. 

Indianapolis Home for Friendless Women... 
1731 North Capitol Ave. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

1125 East Tenth St. 

Shelter House. 

226 North Adelaide St. 

Jeffersonville: 

Old Ladies’ Home. 

330 West Market St. 

Lafayette: 

Indiana State Soldiers’ Home. 


Independent Order of Odd 
Fellows. 

Church of the Brethren. 

Private association. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private organization. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Little Sisters of the Poor.... 
Sisters of the Good Shepherd. 

Private corporation. 

Salvation Army. 

Pentecost Bands. 

Private corporation. 

State of Indiana. 


Martha Home. 

515 Alabama St. 

Old People’s Home. 

131 Park Ave. 

St. Anthony’s Home. 

Twentv-second and Cason Sts. 

Laporte: 

Ruth C. Sabin Home. 

1603 Michigan Ave. 

Logansport: 

Logansport Home for the Friendless. 

630 Race St. 

Madison: 

Drusilla Home. 

Broadway. 

Marion: 

Emily E. Flinn Old Ladies’ Home. 

615 West Twelfth St. 

National Home for Disabled Volunteer Sol¬ 
diers. 

Mexico: 

German Baptist Old Folks’ and Orphans’ 
Home. 

New Albany: 

Old Ladies’ Home. 

704 East Main St. 

Newburg: 

Thornton Home. 

R. D. 15. 

Newcastle: 

Indiana Village for Epileptics. 

Richmond: 

Margaret Smith Home. 

Seventeenth and Main Sts. 

Richmond Home for Friendless Women.... 
306 South Tenth St. 

South BEnd: 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

Hill St. and Colfax Ave. 

Terra Haute: 

Florence Crittenton Home. 

1923 Poplar St. 

Friendly Inn. 

912 Chestnut St. 

Warren: 

Methodist Memorial Home for the Aged.... 


Woman’s Christian Home 
Association. 

Private organization. 

Sisters of St. Francis. 


Trustees of Ruth C. Sabin 
Endowment. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Twentieth Century Club.... 
U. S. Government. 

Church of the Brethren. 


Trustees of W. S. Culbertson 
Endowment. 

Board of Relief, Presbyter¬ 
ian Church, U. S. A. 

State of Indiana. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 


Salvation Army, 


National Florence Critten¬ 
ton Mission. 

Terra Haute Society for Or¬ 
ganizing Charity. 

Methodist Episcopal Church 


Odd Fellows and their fami¬ 
lies. 

Aged persons and children... 


Homeless aged women. 

Wayward girls. 

Fallen girls and their infants. 

Homeless unemployed per¬ 
sons. 

Aged, blind, crippled, and 
incurable men and women. 
Homeless persons. 

Impoverished aged persons... 

Erring women, and orphans.. 

Aged gentlewomen. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 

Homeless persons. 


Homeless women 


Veterans, their wives and 
widows. 

Friendless or erring women 
and children. 

Aged women. 

Aged persons. 


Aged women. 


Crippled and homeless wo¬ 
men. 

Homeless aged women.. 


Aged gentlewomen. 

Disabled volunteer soldiers 
and sailors. 

Aged persons and orphans.... 


Aged gentlewomen. 


Aged ministers and their fam¬ 
ilies. 

Epileptic men. 

Aged women. 

Friendless women and chil¬ 
dren. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 


Fallen women and their in¬ 
fants. 

Friendless persons. 


Worthy aged persons 


1900 

1883 

1885 

1894 

1906 
1882 

1899 

1902 
1873 
1873 

1867 

1904 

1908 

1905 

1896 

1897 
1905 

1903 

1883 
1896 

1884 

1900 
1865 

1889 

1873 

1891 

1905 

1888 

1868 

1905 

1907 
1882 

1909 


Amount of entrance fee asked. 

Amount asked per week. 

Colored persons received. 

Paid employees at close of 

year. 



No. 

23 


0) 

Yes. 

4 

$25 


( 3 ) 

3 

(<) 


No. 

3 


( 5 ) 

No. 

.... 



Yes. 

7 


( 9 ) 

No. 

12 



No. 

1 



Yes. 



(10) 

No. 

4 

250 


No. 

5 



( u ) 

4 



Yes. 


72 350 

I3$3.50 

No. 

3 



Yes. 

179 


2.50 

Yes. 

2 

300 


No. 

1 


12 4.00 

No. 

.... 

500 


No. 

7 


3.00 

Yes. 

4 

(») 


No. 

2 

(» 4 ) 


No. 

2 



Yes. 

387 


is 1.75 

No. 

11 



No. 

4 



No. 

5 



Yes. 

30 

100 


No. 

4 


( 19 ) 

Yes. 

2 



( ll ) 

2 

>_ 




( 6 ) 

Yes. 

2 



Yes. 

3 

300 


No. 

5 


INMATES RECEIVED 
DURING YEAR. 


Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

51 

27 

24 

23 

10 

13 

12 


12 

72 


72 

38 


38 

2,800 

2,500 

300 

47 

18 

29 

295 

285 

10 

160 

90 

70 

( 6 ) 

(•) 

( 6 ) 

7 


7 

79 

79 


4,100 

4,000 

100 

3 


3 

273 

101 

172 

60 


60 

1 


1 

45 

20 

25 

1 


1 

54 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

1 


1 

6 


6 

617 

617 


60 

38 

22 

3 


3 

14 

2 

12 

22 

22 


4 


4 

61 


61 

164 

164 


49 

( 6 ) 

(«) 

1,492 

( 8 ) 

(*) 

8 

2 

6 


1 Adults, $2.50; children, $1.50. 

2 Includes 2 boarders. 

8 Colored only. 

4 For 60 days, $25; 50 cents a day thereafter. 
6 According to ability to pay. 


6 Not reported. 

7 Includes wood yard. 

8 Equipment. 

9 From $4 to $10 per month. 

10 Weekly, $2; monthly, $5. 
















































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


191 


OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


INMATES PRESENT AT CLOSE OF YEAR. 


RECEIPTS 

DURING 

YEAR. 


PAYMENTS DURING 

YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Adults. 

Children. 

Total. 

Derived from— 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

Total. 

© 

a 

© 

a 

© 

>> . 
a g 

§*§ 

2 © 

3 

© ^ 

r G 
*3 © 
2'a 
0 a 

a © 
©^ 

i- 

0 • 
■*-< 

G 

© 

G 

2 s o' 
£ G 

S'© 

■+5 

0 

H 

© 

a 

© 

a 

© 

Pq 

4> 

'O . 

0 g 

G 

-G © 
ftft 

fcH 

O 

s 

38 

► ^ 

—< 03 

G 

© 

G 

O' 

.a 

'© 

Q 

Appro¬ 

pri¬ 

ations. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources. 

84 

53 

31 

84 



47 

29 

18 

47 



$44,907 


$44,907 



$25,712 

$25,712 


$300,000 

$300,000 


8 

2 11 

3 

8 

2 11 



10 

5 

5 

10 



1,960 


$1,541 

$419 

2,169 

1,677 

$492 

25,800 

22,300 

$3,500 

9 

15 


15 

15 









2,857 

$300 

1,154 

1,403 

2,853 

611 

2,242 

7,000 

7,000 

10 

14 


14 



14 







3,246 

800 

1,525 

921 


5,092 

5,092 


11 

12 


12 



12 

8 

6 

2 

8 



1,300 


1,300 



1,300 

1,300 


( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

(«) 

12 

(«) 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 


c 6 ) 


(•) 

(•) 

(«) 

(«) 



7 4,200 

600 


7 3,600 

4,000 

3,750 

250 

8 2,000 

8 2,000 

13 

23 

8 

15 

23 




3,573 


238 

2,584 

751 

3,319 

3,319 


100,000 

100,000 


14 

19 

19 



19 








634 


634 


493 

293 

200 

2,500 

2,500 


15 

150 

90 

60 

150 









( 6 ) 


( 6 ) 


(«) 

2,895 

2,895 


100,000 

100,000 


16 

125 


125 



125 

95 


95 

95 



( 6 ) 


( 6 ) 

(«) 

( 6 ) 

(«) 

(6) 

(«) 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

17 

28 


28 

28 









4,471 

1,600 

552 

2,319 

4,856 

4,856 

53,800 

45,000 

8,800 

18 

16 

16 



16 








6,462 



6,462 

7,196 

7,196 


8 2,232 

8 2,232 

19 

50 

50 



50 








1, 900 

500 

1,400 


1,900 

1,900 


25,000 

25,000 


20 

12 


12 

12 









2,064 


150 

674 

1,240 

1,200 

1,000 

200 

5,000 

4,000 

1,000 

21 

975 

404 

571 

975 









174,235 

174,235 



177,343 

168,223 

9,120 

632,784 

632,784 


22 

5 


5 


5 







1,218 

55 

1,000 

87 

76 

927 

927 


4,000 

3,500 

500 

23 

5 


5 

5 









1,186 


1,100 


86 

1,067 

1,067 


( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

24 

45 

13 

32 

45 









5,514 



5,514 


5,672 

5,672 


50,000 

50,000 


25 

23 

23 

23 









7,039 


1,700 

5,339 

7,023 

5,445 

1,578 

119,502 

47,000 

72,502 

26 



15 

15 









2,844 

500 


144 

2,200 

2, 700 

2,200 

500 

33,000 

5,000 

28,000 

27 

12 


12 

12 









3,386 


2,000 


1,386 

1,570 

1,570 


16,834 

5,000 

11,834 

28 

18 


18 

18 









700 


300 


400 

1,560 

1,500 

60 

35,100 

35,100 


29 

1 753 

1 753 

1 753 









2S9,157 

15 282,800 



6,357 

265,497 

265,497 


922,000 

922,000 


30 

22 

5 

17 

22 



70 

40 

30 

70 



11,375 


8,671 

2, 704 

11,333 

10,983 

350 

40,800 

15,800 

25,000 

31 

q 


9 

9 









(«) 


( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

(•) 

(•) 

85,000 

35,000 

50,000 

32 

ll 

2 

9 

11 



2 


2 

2 



5,350 


3,450 


1,900 

4,560 

3,930 

630 

39,740 

21,370 

18,370 

3a 

1 ifi 

116 


116 









53,396 

1 7 50,584 


is 2,812 

53,396 

34,678 

18,718 

257,535 

257,535 


34 

12 

12 

12 









3,728 


400 

3,328 

3,097 

3,097 

71,893 

18,309 

53,584 

35 

17 


17 

11 

6 

.... 

10 

6 

4 

8 

.... 

2 

2,034 

810 

65 

909 

250 

2,178 

2,178 


13,000 

8,000 

5,000 

36 





38 








3,739 




3,739 

3,485 

3,485 


8 1,847 

8 1,847 


37 

00 

19 


12 


12 

3 

2 

1 


3 


2,074 

600 


66 

1,408 

1,798 

1,583 

215 

8,000 

8,000 


38 

(•) 

(') 

(«) 

( e ) 

(•) 

(«) 

(«) 

(•) 

(•) 

(•) 

(•) 

0 

2,900 

600 

2,000 


300 

2,900 

2,900 


11,000 

6,000 

5,000 

39 

10 

2 

8 

10 

.... 








' 6,200 


3,200 


3,000 

4,533 

3,033 

1,500 

62,188 

52,188 

10,000 

40 


11 No rule against admission. 

12 Average of maximum and minimum amounts. 

13 For boarders. 

u Residents. $200; nonresidents, $500. 
is From U. S. Government. 


16 Children only. 

17 Exclusive of amount covered into state treasury, 
is Covered mto state treasury. 

19 Varies. 











































































































































































































































Institution number. 


192 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table III.—HOMES FOR THE CARE OF ADULTS 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 


11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 

21 

22 

23 

24 

25 

26 
27 


1 

2 


3 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


Supervised or conducted 
by— 


IOWA. 


Boone: 

Eastern Star Masonic Home 


Order of the Eastern Star... 


Cedar Rapids: 

Home for Aged Women. 

206 North Twelfth St., west. 

Sunshine Mission. 

101 South First St. 

Charles City: 

Starr Home for the Aged. 

Grand Ave. 

Davenport: 

Cook Home for the Friendless. 

Pine and Bowditch Sts. (West Daven¬ 
port). 

Fejervary Home for Old Farmers. 

Grand Ave. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

515 Brady St. 

Des Moines: 

Home for the Aged. 

2823 University Ave. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

117 West Walnut St. 

Salvation Army Rescue Home. 

Main and Indianola Roads (South Des 
Moines). 

Dubuque: 

Dubuque Rescue Home. 


Private corporation. 

Private corporation (Prot¬ 
estant churches). 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Trustees of Nicholas Fejer¬ 
vary Endowment. 
Salvation Army. 

Private corporation. 

Salvation Army. 

Salvation Army. 

Private corporation.. 


House of the Good Shepherd. 

Alta Vista St. 

Iowa Home for the Friendless. 

Mt. Pleasant Ave. 

St. Anthony’s Home for Aged People. 

Asbury Road, R. D. 

St. Francis Home for the Aged. 

Davis Lane. 

Fort Dodge: 

Benedict Home. 

R. D. 3, Box 5d. 

Fruitland: 

Elizabeth Hershey Orphan and Old Peo¬ 
ple’s Home. 

Iowa City: 

St. Anthony’s Home for the Aged. 

222 Van Buren St. 

Keokuk: 

Birge Benevolent Home. 

Bank and Seventh Sts. 

Lamont: 

Saints Home and Liberty Home. 

Marshalltown: 

Iowa Soldiers’ Home. 

Station A. 

Old Folks’ Home. 

R. D.5. 

Mason City: 

Iowa Odd Fellows’ and Orphans’ Home... 

Muscatine: 

Old Ladies’ Home of Muscatine. 

1119 Mulberry Ave. 

Sioux City: 

Florence Crittenton Home. 

Twenty-eighth and Court Sts. 

House of the Good Shepherd. 

Twenty-fourth and Court Sts. 

St. Benedict’s Home. 

812 Douglas St. 


Sisters of the Good Shepherd 

Private corporation. 

Sisters of Mercy. 

Sisters of St. Francis. 

Woman’s Christian Temper¬ 
ance Union. 

German Lutheran Society of 
Christian Charities. 

Sisters of Mercy. 

Benevolent Union. 

Reorganized Church of Jesus 
Christ of Latter Day Saints. 

State of Iowa. 

Church of the Brethren. 

Independent Order of Odd 
Fellows and Rebekahs. 

Private corporation. 

National Florence Critten¬ 
ton Mission. 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd 

Sisters of St. Benedict. 


KANSAS. 

Ellsworth: 

Mother Bickerdyke Home. 


State of Kansas 


Manhattan: 

Rebekah Odd Fellows’ Home 
R. D. 1. 

Fort Dodge: 

Kansas State Soldiers’ Home. 


Independent Order of Odd 
Fellows and Rebekah 
State Assembly. 

State of Kansas.. 


Fort Scott: 

4 Rose-Tillotson Home for the Aged 

424 South Margrave St. 
Lawrence: 

5 Old Folks’ Home. 


Church of God 


Colored Baptist State Con¬ 
vention. 


Class of inmates received. 

Year founded. 

Amount of entrance fee asked. 

Amount asked per week. 

Colored persons received. 

Paid employees at close of 

year. 

INMAT 

DUR 

'S3 

o 

H 

ES RECI 
ING YE, 

s 

*03 

:ived 

1R. 

*03 

a 

<v 

fa 

Eastern Stars and their chil- 

1903 



No. 

5 

3 

l 

2 

dren. 










1SS7 

$600 


No. 

6 

1 


1 


1896 



Yes. 

4 

88 


88 

dren. 










1900 

2 650 


No. 

2 

1 


1 

Indigent aged women. 

1S82 

100 


No. 

8 

4 


4 


1892 

100 


No. 

3 

2 

2 


Homeless unemployed men.. 

1899 



( 3 ) 

3 

5 

5 



1896 

500 


Yes. 

10 

8 

1 

7 

Homeless unemployed men.. 

1899 



( 8 L 

6 

42 

42 



1S99 



Yes. 

5 

56 


56 

fants. 










1S96 


( 6 ) 

No. 

3 

9 


9 

babies. 









1903 


$2.00 

No. 

2 

51 


51 

quent children. 










1874 


( 8 ) 

No. 

9 

27 


27 

dren. 








Aged men and women. 

1898 

. 

2 10.00 

No. 

15 

35 

19 

16 


1905 


2 3.75 

No. 

1 

22 

17 

5 


1882 



Yes. 

2 

17 


17 

Aged persons and orphans... 

1894 

7 500 


No. 

7 

15 

8 

7 

Aged men and women. 

1902 


210.00 

( 8 ) 


91 

41 

50 

Aged women and children .... 

1890 

( 5 ) 

3.00 

No. 

2 

5 

1 

4 

A ged men and women.. 

1895 


2 2.50 

No. 

13 

0) 

(*) 

(!) 


1887 



Yes. 

210 

222 

158 

64 

mothers, and armv nurses. 









Impoverished aged persons... 

1906 


3.00 

Yes. 

2 












Odd Fellows, Rebekahs, and 

1903 


i«5.00 

No. 

13 

14 

6 

8 

their children. 









Aged women. 

1895 

500 


No. 

1 

1 


1 

Fallen girls and abandoned 

1894 


<“) 

Yes. 

4 

141 

31 

110 

infants. 










1903 



Yes. 

4 

32 


32 

Aged persons. 

1907 

0) 

5.00 

No. 

2 

0) 

0) 

(») 

Soldiers’ widows, and their 

1,897 



Yes. 

9 

27 


27 

children. 









Odd Fellows, their widows, 

1906 



No. 

12 

28 

14 

14 

Rebekahs, and orphans. 









Civil War veterans and their 

1890 



Yes. 

35 

204 

104 

100 

families. 







Destitute aged persons. 

1910 



(8) 

2 

15 

9 

6 

Aged and infirm persons. 

1906 



(U) 

i 

6 

2 

4 


1 Not reported. 

2 Average of maximum and minimum amounts. 

3 No rule against admission. 


4 Equipment. 

5 According to ability to pay. 

6 Children, $1 per week; women, $8 per month. 











































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


193 


OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


INMATES PRESENT AT CLOSE OF YEAR. 


Adults. 

Children. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Permanently 

dependent. 

Temporarily 

dependent. 

, Wayward or 

delinquent. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Orphan or de¬ 

pendent. 

Received with 

parent. 

Delinquent. 

16 

5 

11 

16 









19 


19 

19 









C 1 ) 


(0 


(») 


o) 

0) 

M 

(») 



6 


6 

6 




20 


20 

20 









5 

5 


5 









2 

2 



2 








50 

8 

42 

50 







• 


6 

6 



6 








23 


23 



23 

6 

(!) 

( l ) 

6 



3 


3 



3 

6 

0) 

(1) 

6 



34 


34 



34 

50 

50 



50 

10 

10 

10 



23 


23 

23 



95 

45 

50 

95 









104 

62 

42 

104 









17 


17 



17 

8 

5 

3 


8 


23 

16 

7 

23 



43 

28 

15 

43 



87 

37 

50 

87 









9 


9 

9 



3 

1 

2 

2 


1 

57 

19 

38 

57 









850 

674 

176 

850 









14 

5 

9 

12 

2 








22 

11 

'n 

22 



46 

19 

27 

46 



5 

5 

5 









23 


23 



23 

20 

12 

8 

3 

17 


35 


35 

1 


34 







21 

12 

9 

21 









67 

67 

67 



11 

7 

4 

11 



23 

13 

10 

23 



51 

22 

29 

51 



501 

271 

230 

501 



77 

33 

44 


77 


15 

9 

6 

15 









4 

1 

3 

4 






















I 



RECEIPTS 

DURING 

YEAR. 



Derived from— 

Total. 

Appro- 

Dona- 

Care of 

Other 


pri- 

ations. 

tions. 

in¬ 

mates. 

sources. 

$7,492 


$6,784 

$667 

$41 

4,005 


586 

500 

2,919 

4,078 


4,078 



2,381 


995 


1,386 

400 



400 

3,369 



150 

3,219 

0) 

( i > 

0) 


(*) 

6,876 


716 

3,225 

2,935 

5,259 




5,259 

2,577 


1,397 

366 

814 

1,800 


1,260 

450 

90 

11,432 

$400 

1,600 

400 

9,032 

5,160 


1,471 

1,488 

2,201 

( i ) 


(*) 

( i ) 

0) 

12,588 

724 


11,864 


7,663 


4,764 

2,899 

7,675 


1,573 

765 

5,337 

( 9 ) 



( 9 ) 

( 9 ) 

1,451 


912 

205 

334 

10,285 


( i > 

0) 

o) 

163,287 

163,287 




2,763 

1,601 

354 

808 

17,060 


15,756 

1,304 


1,828 


492 


1,336 

4,557 

650 


1,596 

2,311 

15,859 


874 

236 

14,749 

1,488 



1,488 


19,930 

19,930 




14,043 

14,043 



105 400 

105,400 




1,016 


1,016 



770 

50 

200 


520 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

$5,508 

$5,508 


$28,020 

$27,000 

$1,020 

1 

3,995 

3,573 

$422 

61,763 

25,000 

36,763 

2 

4,073 

4,073 


30,310 

30,000 

310 

3 

900 

900 


23,000 

10,000 

13,000 

4 

6,000 

6,000 


(») 

100,000 

(») 

5 

3,744 

2,136 

1,608 

57,000 

20,000 

37,000 

6 

0) 

(») 

c i ) 

4 1,168 

4 1,168 


7 

9,126 

9,126 


115,563 

48,039 

67,524 

8 

5,325 

5,247 

78 

4 1,671 

4 1,671 


9 

3,722 

2,572 

1,150 

15,000 

15,000 


10 

1,800 

1,694 

106 

9,500 

8,000 

1,500 

11 

' 11,025 

10,525 

500 

67,500 

67,500 


12 

4,661 

4,661 


53,120 

20,000 

33,120 

13 

(*) 

0) 

o) 

(»> 

(*) 

C 1 ) 

14 

11,220 

7,256 

3,964 

84,000 

84,000 


15 

3,838 

3,176 

662 

23,000 

23,000 


16 

6,237 

5,568 

669 

79,000 

70,000 

9,000 

17 

( 9 ) 

( 9 ) 

( 9 ) 

( 9 ) 

( 9 ) 


18 

1,451 

1,406 

45 

12,000 

5,000 

7,000 

19 

11,438 

11,438 


51, G39 

51,639 


20 

176,194 

166,194 

10,000 

347,825 

347,825 


21 

2,592 

2,592 


19,000 

19,000 


22 

14,276 

13,447 

829 

150,000 

150,000 


23 

1,030 

965 

65 

19,300 

4,000 

15,300 

24 

4,542 

4,542 


35,000 

35,000 


25 

15,593 

15,361 

232 

45,350 

45,350 


26 

1,488 

1,488 


16,000 

16,000 


27 

20,311 

13,273 

7,038 

100,000 

100,000 


1 

14,043 

9,176 

4,867 

77,035 

77,035 


2 

105,400 

80,600 

24,800 

105,400 

105,400 


3 

723 

523 

200 

2,000 

2,000 


4 

720 

420 

300 

5,000 

5,000 

. 

5 


7 For adults. 10 Per month; no weekly charge. 

8 Indeterminate. 11 Confinement fee, $25 if able. 

9 Included in report of Mercy Hospital, Iowa City. 12 Colored only. 


44153°—14-13 






























































































































































































































194 BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table III.—HOMES FOR THE CARE OF ADULTS 


® 

& 

a 


Cl 

o 


6 

7 

8 


9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 
31 
22 

23 

24 

25 

26 

27 

28 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


Supervised or conducted 
by— 


Class of inmates received. 


■6 

o 

S3 

cl 

3 

O 


Iv A N S A S—Cont inued. 


C8 


!* 


Leavenworth: 

Kansas State Protective Home. 

610 Fifth Ave. 

National Home for Disabled Volunteer Sol¬ 
diers. 

William Small Memorial Home for Aged 
Women. 

719 North Broadway. 

Parsons: 

Parsons’ Home and Hospital. 

2329 Grand Ave. 

Topeka: 

Florence Crittenton Home.. 

Quinton Heights. 

Florence Crittenton Home.. 

Twenty-third and Jefferson Sts. 

Ingleside Home.. 

Wichita: 

Kansas Masonic Home.. 

Maple and Seneca Sts. 

Sedgewick Home. 

223 West Third St. 

Wichita Rescue Home. 

1021 Lafayette Ave. 


Private corporation 
U. S. Government. 
Private corporation 


Private corporation. 


National Florence Critten¬ 
ton Mission. 

National Florence Critten¬ 
ton Mission. 

Private corporation. 

Kansas Masonic Grand 
Lodge and Eastern Star 
Order. 

Associated Charities.. 

Pentecostal Church of the 
Nazarene. 


Aged persons and orphans.... 


1887 


Disabled volunteer soldiers 1865 
and sailors. 

Homeless aged women. 1892 


Homeless men and women.... 


1896 


Fallen women and their in¬ 
fants. 

Fallen women and their in¬ 
fants. 

Aged women.. 


1901 

1905 

1880 


Masons, Eastern Stars, and 
their families. 


1896 


Homeless persons 


1909 


Fallen women 


1894 


KENTUCKY. 

Covington: 

Home for Aged and Indigent Women 
Seventh and Garrard Sts. 

Wayfarers’ Rest. 

1014 Russell St. 

Fort Thomas: 

House of the Good Shepherd. 


Private corporation. 
Associated Charities 


Sisters of the Good Shepherd. 


Lexington: 

Home of the Friendless. 

522 West Short St. 

House of Mercy. 

519 West Fourth St. 

MacAlester Home of Christ Church Cathedral 
Third and Walnut Sts. 

Odd Fellows’ Widows’ and Orphans’ Home 

511 West Sixth St. 

Pentecostal Church Home. 

441 Kinkead St. 

Pythian Home of Kentucky. 

R. D. 5. 

Louisville: 

All Prayer Foundlings’ Home. 

1622 Story Ave. 

Church Home and Infirmary. 

1508 Morton Ave. 

Cook Benevolent Institution. 

622 West Kentucky St. 

Henrie Barret Monfort Home. 

413 Broadway. 

Home for Friendless Women. 

512 West Kentucky St. 

Home for the Aged. 

622 South Tenth St. 

Hope Rescue Mission... 

808 West Jefferson St. 

House of the Good Shepherd 9 . 

518 South Eighth St. 

House of the Good Shepherd. 

2214 Bank St. 

King’s Daughters’ Home for Incurables. 

Stevens Ave. and Norris Place. 

Louisville Protestant Altenheim. 

936 Barrett Ave. 

Masonic Widows’ and Orphans’ Home. 

Second St. and Avery Ave. 

O’Leary Home. 

904 Barrett Ave. 

Parr’s Rest. 

978 Third St. 

St. James Old Folks’ Home. 

3031 Greenwood Ave. 

St. Lawrence Institute for Working Boys... 
233 East College St. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

915 West Broadway. 

Wayfarers’ Lodge. 

212 Pearl Ave. 

Owensboro: 

Mary Kendall Home. 

306 Third St. 


Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Christ Church Cathedral.... 

Independent Order of Odd 
Fellows. 

Pentecostal Power Church.. 

Knights of Pythias of Ken¬ 
tucky. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation (Epis¬ 
copal). 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private organization. 

Little Sisters of the Poor.... 

Private corporation (Bap¬ 
tist). 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd. 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd. 

King’s Daughters. 

German Protestantchurches. 

Masonic Grand Lodge of 
Kentucky. 

Sisters of Charity. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Salvation Army. 

Associated Charities. 


Woman’s Christian Associa¬ 
tion. 


Impoverished aged women... 

Homeless, incurable men and 
women. 

Aged, dependent, and erring 
women, and orphan girls. 

Dependent aged women. 

Fallen women and their in¬ 
fants. 

Indigent parishioners. 

Widows and orphans of Odd 
Fellows. 

Homeless widows and or¬ 
phans. 

Widows and orphans of 
Knights of Pythias. 

Fallen women and their in¬ 
fants, and foundlings. 

Homeless aged persons. 

Impoverished aged women... 

Young working women. 

Fallen women and their in¬ 
fants. 

Destitute aged persons. 

Homeless men. 

Wayward and orphan girls... 

Wayward and orphan girls... 

Incurables. 

Indigent aged persons. 

Masons’ widows and their 
children. 

Needy unemployed men. 

Indigent aged gentlewomen.. 

Aged men and women. 

Homeless working boys. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 

Homelass men and women... 


1886 

1894 

1876 

1876 

1895 
1880 
1898 
1909 

1907 

1905 
1S84 
1837 
1S71 
1876 
1869 
1900 
1842 
1867 
1909 

1906 
1S67 
1898 
1909 
1887 

1908 
1905 
1885 


Wayward girls, destitute or 
erring women, and children. 


1904 


Amount of entrance fee asked. 

Amount asked per week. 

Colored persons received. 

Paid employees at close of 

year. 

INMATES RECEIVED 
DURING YEAR. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 



(!) 

2 

30 

7 

23 



Yes. 

515 

1,192 

1,192 


$500 


No. 


1 


1 

(<) 

No. 

3 

23 

12 

11 



No. 

2 

19 


19 

5 

$2.00 

(>) 

2 

30 


30 

300 


No. 

5 

M 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 



No. 

9 

14 

11 

3 



No. 

5 

1,048 

850 

198 

35 


Yes. 


50 


50 

(*) 


No. 

6 

6 


6 

( 6 ) 

( s ) 

( 5 ) 

( s ) 

( 5 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 



No. 

4 

30 


30 



No. 

i 

8 


Q 



No. 

i 

27 

( 5 ) 

( 6 ) 



No. 

1 


10 


No. 

14 

21 

10 

li 



Yes. 


12 


12 



No. 

8 

16 

4 

12 



No. 

1 

27 

8 

19 


7 4.50 

No. 

12 

7 


7 



No. 

3 

7 


7 


3.00 

No. 

3 

400 


400 



No. 

2 

91 

6 

85 



Yes. 


99 

60 

39 



No. 

1 

1,629 

1,629 




Yes. 


30 


30 



No. 

7 

130^ 


130 



No. 

5 

19 

10 

9 

250 


No. 

2 

4 

1 

3 



No. 

28 

72 

52 

20 



No. 

1 

8 

8 




No. 

4 

1 


1 

100 


0) 

1 

( 5 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 


2.00 

No. 

3 

58 

58 




( io ) 

5 

38 

38 




No. 

5 

2,118 

2,063 

55 


(<) 

No. 

2 

41 

41 


1 Colored only. 

2 Includes value of donations other than 

3 From U . S. Government. 


4 According to ability to pay. 

6 Not reported. 

6 Residents, $300; nonresidents, $500. 




























































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


195 


OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


INMATES PRESENT AT CLOSE OF TEAR. 


Adults. 


Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Permanently 

dependent. 

Temporarily 

dependent. 

Wayward or 
delinquent. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Orphan or de¬ 

pendent. 

Received with 

parent. 

Delinquent. 

7 

3 

4 

7 



13 

11 

2 

13 



2,595 

2,595 


2,595 









28 


28 

28 









20 

8 

12 

19 

1 








17 


17 



17 







8 


8 



8 

14 

6 

8 


14 


24 


24 

24 








36 

20 

16 

36 



49 

22 

27 

49 



( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 5 ) 

( 5 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 5 ) 

10 


10 



10 







35 


35 

35 









( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 5 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 5 ) 

(•) 

( 6 ) 

( 5 ) 

( 5 ) 

( 5 ) 

170 


170 

10 

60 

100 

80 


80 

80 



14 


14 

14 



2 

2 



2 


8 


8 



8 

6 

C) 

(») 


6 


4 


4 

4 







1 


1 

1 



92 

45 

47 

92 



6 


6 

6 



4 


4 


4 


2 


2 

2 



47 

16 

31 

47 



3 


3 


3 


11 

C) 

( s ) 

11 



5R 

3 

53 

56 







19 


19 

19 









37 


37 


s 37 








18 


18 



18 

13 

5 

8 


13 


220 

125 

95 

220 









77 

77 



77 














146 


146 

60 


86 







310 


310 

130 


ISO 

16 

5 

11 

16 



1 


1 

1 



21 

7 

14 

21 









22 


22 

22 



291 

176 

115 

291 



6 

6 


6 









15 


15 

15 









6 

1 

5 

6 















23 

23 


23 



17 

17 



17 








23 

• 

23 



23 








13 


13 

8 


5 

28 


28 

21 

7 

... 


Children. 


RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 


Total. 


2 $1,182 
447,819 
5,700 

2,302 

1,926 

836 

3,000 

19,200 

2,900 

975 

4,601 

( 6 ) 

26,opo 

1,200 

2,223 

320 

72,226 

( s ) 

9,480 

1,747 
10,472 
6,435 
2,500 
2,023 
8,606 
3,239 
15,500 
25,271 
11,318 
7,908 
( 6 ) 

( s ) 

( 5 ) 

846 

4,458 

7,550 

i»l,852 

( 6 ) 


Derived from— 


Appro¬ 

pri¬ 

ations. 


$500 
3 437,657 
500 

500 

711 

541 


900 

600 


C) 


800 

800 


10,000 


(») 

( 5 ) 


( 6 ) 


Dona¬ 

tions. 


*$285 


200 

1,010 

1,150 

203 


19,200 


549 

( 6 ) 

240 

200 

70 

120 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

9,480 

1,747 

62 

1,000 
2,000 
986 
8,606 
3,239 
( s ) 
1,057 
1,318 
6,612 
( 5 ) 

( s ) 

( 6 ) 
689 
2,699 


(•) 


Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 


Other 

sources. 


7 Average of maximum and minimum amounts. 

3 Boarders. 

9 Includes report of St. Peter Claver’s Colored School. 


$ 2,000 


792 


50 


375 


( 5 ) 

1,000 


(*) 


7,581 


( 6 ) 

2,134 


1,296 


C) 

( 6 ) 

96 

1,599 


( 6 ) 


$397 
10,162 
3,000 


65 

42 

3,000 


2,000 


4,052 

( 6 ) 

24,760 

200 
1,353 
200 
( 4 ) 

(•) 


2,829 
5,435 
500 
1,037 


( 6 ) 
22,080 


( 5 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 5 ) 

61 

160 

7,550 

1*1,852 

(») 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

$1,182 

$1,182 


$3,000 

$3,000 


6 

434,226 

426,844 

$7,382 

1,147,182 

1,147,182 


7 

6,300 

4,800 

1,500 

50,000 

50,000 


8 

1,466 

1,334 

132 

10,000 

10,000 


9 

1,895 

1,895 


6,000 

6,000 


10 

836 

836 


1,600 

1,600 


11 

3,600 

3,600 


( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 4 ) 

12 

25,500 

12,500 

13,000 

330,000 

300,000 

$30,000 

13 

1,100 

1,100 


4,000 

4,000 


14 

1,200 

1,200 


4,000 

4,000 


15 

4,359 

4,144 

215 

24,000 

12,000 

12,000 

1 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 5 ) 

( s ) 

( 5 ) 

( 6 ) 

2 

26,000 

19,000 

7,000 

200,000 

200,000 


3 

1,200 

1,200 


4,010 

4,010 


4 

2,192 

2,192 


6,000 

6,000 


5 

332 

332 


10,500 

7,000 

3,500 

6 

100,392 

15,562 

84,830 

154,392 

149,392 

5,000 

7 

734 

734 


( 5 ) 

( 5 ) 


8 

17,200 

9,299 

7,901 

60,000 

60,000 


9 

1,747 

1,500 

247 

205 


205 

10 

10,457 

(‘) 

( 6 ) 

190,000 

125,000 

65,000 

11 

4,952 

4,952 


91,473 

7,500 

83,973 

12 

4,000 

4,000 


50,000 

C) 

( 5 ) 

13 

3,528 

3,528 


42,328 

15,000 

27,328 

14 

8,451 

8,451 


100,000 

100,000 


15 

3,131 

3,131 


11,559 

9,000 

2,559 

16 

16,000 

16,000 


38,500 

38,500 


17 

25,271 

25,271 


313,000 

313,000 


18 

8,682 

4,055 

4,627 

11,000 

11,000 


19 

2,965 

2,003 

962 

15,000 

15,009 


20 

( 5 ) 

( s ) 

( 6 ) 

200,000 

( 5 ) 

( s ) 

21 

( 6 ) 

( 5 ) 

' (•) 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

22 

( 5 ) 

( 5 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 5 ) 

( s ) 

’ ( 5 ) 

23 

752 

606 

146 

7,500 

6,000 

1,500 

24 

4,429 

4,429 


4,000 


4,000 

25 

8,282 

8,282 


ii 2,207 

H2,207 

26 

2,274 

2,274 



27 

C) 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

(*) 

C) 

( 6 ) 

28 


10 No rule against admission. 

11 Equipment. 

i* Includes wood yard. 

































































































































































































































Institution number. 


196 BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table III.—HOMES FOR THE CARE OF ADULTS 


29 

30 

31 


10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 


19 


10 

11 

12 

13 

14 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


KENTUCKY—Continued. 
Paducah: 

Home of the Friendless. 

Fourteenth and Burnett Sts. 
Pewee Valley: 

Kentucky Confederate Home. 

Shelbyville: 

Old Masons’ Home of Kentucky.. 


LOUISIANA. 

New Orleans: 

Bethany Home. 

North Claiborne Ave. and Allen St. 

Fink Asylum. 

3643 Camp St. 

German Protestant Home for the Aged and 
Infirm. 

5919 Magazine St. 

Home for Homeless Men. 

3258 Chippewa St. 

Home for Homeless Young Women. 

1434 Polymnia St. 

Home for the Aged. 

Johnson and La Harpe Sts. 

Home for the Aged. 

3618 Prytania St. 

House of the Good Shepherd. 

2600 Bienville St. 

Lepers’ Home. 

Conti and Chartres Sts. 

Liner’s Harvest Home. 

2538 Delachaise St. 

Maison Hospitaliere. 

822 Barracks St. 

Memorial Home for Young Women. 

803 Washington Ave. 

New Orleans Convalescent Home. 

2804 Carrollton Ave. 

New Orleans Home for Incurables. 

612 Henry Clay Ave. 

St. Anna’s Asylum. 

1823 Prytania St. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

617 St. Charles St. 

Soldiers’ Home of Louisiana. 

Thorny Lafon’s Home of the Holy Family.. 
Hospital and Tonti Sts. 

Shreveport: 

Home for the Homeless. 

Jordan St. and Division Ave. 


Private corporation. 


St. Mark’s Epicopal Church 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation.. 

Private corporation. 

King’s Daughters. 


MAINE. 

Auburn: 

Auburn Home for Aged Women. 

13 South Goff St. 

Augusta: 

St. Mark’s Home. 

57 Winthrop St. 

Bangor: 

Good Samaritan Home. 

105 Third St. 

Home for Aged Men in Bangor. 

181 State St. 

Home for Aged Women. 

277 State St. 

King’s Daughters’ Home. 

89 Ohio St. 

Bath: 

Home for Aged Couples and Old Men.... 

Harvard St. 

Old Ladies’ Home. 

800 High St. 

Belfast: 

Belfast Home for Aged Women’.. 

24 Cedar St. 

Lewiston: 

Lewiston Home for Aged Women. 

507 Main St. 

Portland: 

Home for Aged Men. 

119 Danforth St. 

Home for Aged Women. 

64 Emery St. 

Mary Brown Home. 

15 Capisic St. (Woodfords P.O.). 

St. Joseph’s Home and Hospital.I Sisters of Mercy 

120 Walton St. (Woodfords P.O.). 


Supervised or conducted 
by- 


Private corporation. 


State of Kentucky. 


Masonic Grand Lodge of 
Kentucky. 


German Protestant Beth¬ 
any Society. 

Private organization.. 


Private corporation. 


Private corporation.. 

Private corporation. 

Little Sisters of the Poor.... 
Little Sisters of the Poor.... 
Sisters of the Good Shepherd. 

State qf Louisiana.. 

Private corporation.. 

Private corporation.. 

Private corporation.. 

Private corporation.. 

Private corporation.. 

Private corporation.. 

Salvation Army.. 


State of Louisiana. 

Sisters of the Holy Family. 

Private corporation. 


Private corporation. 
Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 
Private corporation. 
Private corporation. 


Class of inmates received. 


1 Not reported. 

2 According to ability to pay. 
1 Colored only. 


Homeless women and chil¬ 
dren. 

Confederate veterans. 

Masons and their wives. 


Aged and infirm persons. 


Protestant widows and chil¬ 
dren. 

Aged persons. 


Homeless men. 


Destitute women and chil¬ 
dren. 

Destitute aged persons. 


Aged persons. 


Fallen women and wayward 
girls. 

Lepers. 


Destitute families 
Needy gentlewomen. 


Fallen women and their in¬ 
fants. 

Needy convalescents. 


Incurable women and chil¬ 
dren. 

Destitute women and their 
children. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 

Confederate veterans. 

Aged men and women. 


Destitute aged persons. 


Dependent aged women. 
Aged gentlewomen. 


Fallen women, wayward 
girls, and children. 
Indigent aged men. 


Aged women. 

Homeless unprotected girls.. 

Aged men and couples. 

Impoverished aged women.. 

Homeless aged women. 


Impoverished aged women.. 

Homeless aged men. 

Aged women. 

Women needing recuperation. 

Aged, incurable, and con¬ 
valescent women. 


■o 

<u 

•O 

a 

a 

o 


1892 

1902 

1901 

1889 

1874 

1885 

1907 

1886 
1840 
1882 
1859 
1894 
1876 

1893 
1888 
1889 

1893 

1847 

1908 

1882 

1848 

1897 

1886 

1871 

1902 

1903 

1872 

1891 

1892 

1875 

1903 

1902 

1884 

1854 

1894 
1882 


A4 


a 

a> 


o 

a 


m 


s $200 


50 

200 

100 


100 

100 

200 

( 9 ) 

io 200 
2 175 


44 


<u 

A 


o 

a 

•< 


( J ) 


7 $4.00 


( 8 ) 


3.50 


7 3.50 
7 2.50 


a 

o 


T3 

<u 


o 

O 


4 No rule against admission. 

6 Equipment. 

6 And all property owned or acquired thereafter. 


No. 

No. 

No. 


No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

( 3 ) 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

(<) 

No. 

Yes. 

No. 


No. 

No. 

Yes. 

No. 

No.' 

Yes. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

(<) 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 


r -£ J- 


35 

8 

2 

10 

3 


4 

20 

1 

2 

3 
10 

5 

2 

18 

2 

0) 

2 

4 

4 

4 

( l ) 

3 

4 


INMATES RECEIVED 
DURING YEAR. 


o 

Eh 


0) 

38 

6 

4 

6 

12 

110 

169 

64 

44 

203 

0) 

20 

4 

18 

133 

10 

14 

71 

20 

46 

(>) 


42 

2 

0) 

280 


61 


C5 

a 


0) 


38 

6 


6 

no 

23 

34 

12 


(>) 


119 


3 
71 

20 

4 


0) 


0) 


— 

*3 

a 

<x> 


(») 


146 

30 

32 

203 

0) 

11 

4 

18 

14 

10 

11 


42 


(*) 


(») 


0) 

280 


61 





































































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


197 


OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


INMATES PRESENT AT CLOSE OF YEAR. 


Adults. 


Children. 


Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Permanently 

dependent. 

Temporarily 

dependent. 

Wayward or 
delinquent. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Orphan or de¬ 

pendent. 

Received with 

parent. 

Delinquent. 







45 


45 

35 

10 


237 

237 


237 






20 

20 


20 









16 

11 

5 

16 









55 


55 

53 

2 

.... 

9 

4 

5 


9 


53 

20 

33 

53 









35 

35 


25 

10 








9 


9 

1 

8 








200 

90 

110 

200 









192 

80 

112 

192 









204 


204 

7 


197 







66 

( l ) 

0) 

66 









22 

11 

11 

22 



9 

6 

3 

9 



32 


32 

32 








8 


8 



8 

7 

5 

2 

7 



17 

0) 

0) 


17 








34 

34 

34 



6 


6 

6 



56 


56 

45 

11 

.... 

29 

13 

16 


29 

... 

17 

17 



17 








122 

122 


122 









81 

16 

65 

81 









( l ) 

( i ) 

0) 

(!) 

(*) 

(») 







9 

9 

9 







12 


12 

12 









0) 

( i ) 

(>) 

0) 

(») 

0) 

0) 

( i ) 

(*) 

0) 

C) 

c) 

6 

6 


6 









(i) 


( l ) 

o) 









3 


3 

3 








5 

5 


5 









16 


16 

16 









6 


6 

6 









13 


13 

13 









13 

13 


13 









27 


27 

27 









14 


14 

2 

12 








30 


30 

30 






















RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 


Total. 


$3,450 

41,000 

11,440 


1,391 

6,309 

4,705 

4,000 

793 

« 

0) 

(0 

20,277 

W 

920 

2,734 

2,598 

7,411 

8,714 

3,539 

28,900 

4,465 

0) 


1,581 

3,128 

2,998 

3,267 

0 ) 

3,732 

3,050 

3,090 

1,603 

2,109 

0) 
7,148 
4,047 
3,728 


Derived from— 


Appro¬ 

pri¬ 

ations. 


$3,250 

41,000 


360 

2,000 

300 


0 ) 
18,000 
120 
516 
504 

0) 
1,000 
351 


28,600 

1,960 


G) 


1,200 


500 

175 


0) 


Dona¬ 

tions. 


$200 


9,640 

75 

42 

1,461 

1,000 

214 

C 1 ) 

0) 

0) 
2,277 
42 


2,230 

0) 
2,411 
444 


300 

363 


0) 


372 

127 

468 


G) 


298 

40 


395 

600 


0) 


659 

382 

800 


Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 


$420 


170 


0) 

0) 

G) 


0) 


G) 


1,991 

1,330 


0) 

1,967 


0) 


2,636 

2,428 


Other 

sources. 


$1,800 

896 
6,267 
2,714 

1,000 
279 
0) 

0) 


404 


0) 
4,000 
7,919 
3,539 


2,142 
0) 

1,209 

1,010 


3,267 
0) 
967 

2,835 

3,090 

1,208 

1,509 

0) 
6,489 
1,029 
500 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 


Total. 


$4,287 

41,000 

11,018 


1,175 

6,111 

3,881 

2,000 

766 

0) 
12,000 
0) 
20,277 

0) 

570 

2,050 

0) 

7,000 

17,914 

5,073 

35,000 
5,788 

0 ) 


1,626 

3,068 

3,015 

2,671 

0) 

2,905 

2,275 

2,891 

1,560 

2,100 

0) 

6,739 
4,486 
3,780 


VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 


For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

• 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

Institution number. 

$4,287 


•SI 200 

$1,200 


29 

41,000 


45,000 

45,000 


30 

7,246 

$3,772 

47,600 

47,000 

$600 

31 

1,075 

100 

24,350 

20,000 

4,350 

1 

6,111 


292,472 

50,000 

242,472 

2 

3,455 

426 

68,700 

40,000 

28,700 

3 

2,000 

. 

1,000 

1,000 


4 

711 

55 

10,000 

5,000 

5,000 

5 

( i ) 

0) 

<*) 

C 1 ) 

< x ) 

6 

8,000 

4,000 

75,000 

75,000 


7 

(1) 


(!) 

(!) 


8 

20,277 


50,000 

50,000 


9 

0) 

0) 

1,800 

1,800 


10 

570 


7,000 

7,000 


11 

1,800 

250 

3,500 

3,500 


12 

0 

0) 

2,590 

o 


13 

6,000 

1,000 

0) 

40,000 

( i ) 

14 

10,708 

7,206 

195,300 

55,500 

139,800 

15 

5,073 


& 1,190 

51,190 


16 

35,000 


50,000 

50,000 


17 

2^747 

3,041 

0) 

30^000 

0) 

18 

(!) 

0) 

0) 

25,000 

C 1 ) 

19 

1,626 


14,019 

4,500 

9,519 

1 

2,800 

268 

15,000 


15,000 

2 

2,306 

709 

6,000 

6,000 


3 

2,671 


84,500 

15,000 

69,500 

4 

(») 

0) 

0) 

C 1 ) 


5 

2,905 


26,912 

6,000 

20,912 

6 

2,275 


40,597 

7,000 

33,597 

7 

2,891 


70,000 

10,000 

60,000 

8 

1,560 


13,000 

6,000 

7,000 

9 

1,956 

144 

15,000 

8,000 

7,000 

10 

(>) 

(») 

0) 

0) 

(>) 

11 

6,739 


154,710 

23,000 

131,710 

12 

4,486 


32,000 

20,000 

12,000 

13 

3,780 





14 







^ Average of maximum and minimum amounts. 
8 From $1.50 to $3; boarders only. 


9 Residents, $200; nonresidents, $500. 

10 And all property owned. 


























































































































































































198 BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table III.—HOMES FOR THE CARE OF ADULTS 


© 

£ 


a 


3 

3 


3 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


Supervised or conducted 
by— 


Class of inmates received. 


■o 

© 


a 

3 


I 



MAINE—Continued. 


15 

16 

17 

18 
19 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 
21 
22 

23 

24 

25 

26 

27 

28 

29 

30 

31 


Portland— Continued. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

Milk and Silver Sts. 

Temporary Home lor Women and Children. 
Powsland St. 

Rockland: 

Home for Aged Women. 

148 North Main St. 

Saco: 

Wardwell Home for Aged Women. 

43 Middle St. 

Togus: 

National Home for Disabled Volunteer 
Soldiers. 

National Soldiers’ Home. 

MARYLAND. 

Annapolis: 

Chase Home.]... 

22 Maryland Ave. 

Baltimore: 

Aged Men and Women’s Home. 

1622 Druid Hill Ave. 

Aged Women’s and Men’s Home. 

Lexington and Calhoun Sts. 

Augsburg Home for Orphans and the Aged.. 
746 West Lexington St. 

Bennett Home. 

14 East Franklin Terrace. 

Confederate Women’s Home. 

1020 Linden Ave. 

Daughters in Israel of Baltimore City. 

1200 East Baltimore St. 

Emergency Home for Destitute Women.... 
115 North Greene St. 

Florence Crittenton Mission. 

837 Hollins St. 

Friendly Inn. 

307 South Sharp St. 

General German Aged People’s Home. 

Baltimore and Payson Sts. 

German Immigrant Home and Seamen’s 
Mission. 

1308 Beason St. 

Guild of St. George. 

1404 East Chase St. 

Hebrew Friendly Inn and Aged Home. : 

111 Aisquith St. 

Hebrew Hospital and Asylum (Home De¬ 
partment). 

East Monument St. 

Home for Fallen Women of Baltimore City.. 
5 North Exeter St. 

Home for Incurables of Baltimore City. 

Twenty-first St. and Guilford Ave. 

Home for the Aged. 

Preston and Valley Sts. 

Home for the Aged. 

Fulton Ave. and Franklin St. 

House of the Good Shepherd. 

Mount and Hollins Sts. 

House of the Good Shepherd. 

Calverton Road. 

St. Martha’s Episcopal House... 

735 West Lexington St. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

Montgomery and Sharp Sts. 

Shelter for Aged and Infirm Colored Persons. 
517 West Biddle St. 

Star of Hope Rescue Home. 

333 North Fulton Ave. 

Easton: 

Home for Aged Women. 

Frederick: 

Home for the Aged. 

Record St. 

Pikesville: 

Maryland Line Confederate Soldiers’ Home.. 
Port Deposit: 

Silver Cross Home for Epileptics. 

Salisbury: 

Salisbury Home for the Aged. 

Westminster: 

Home for the Aged. 

Main St. 


Salvation Army.... 
Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

U. S. Government.. 


Protestant Episcopal Church 


Methodist Episcopal churches 

Private corporation. 

Lutheran Svnod of Missouri, 
Ohio, and Other States. 

Trustees of Margaret J. Ben¬ 
nett Endowment. 

Private corporation. 

Federated Jewish Charities.. 

Salvation Army. 

National Florence Critten¬ 
ton Mission. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

German Evangelical Synod 
of North America. 

Private organization. 

Private corporation. 

Hebrew Federated Charities. 


Private organization. 

Private corporation. 

Little Sisters of the Poor.... 

Methodist Episcopal Church. 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd 

Private corporation (Episco¬ 
pal). 

Salvation Army. 

Private corporation. 

International Apostolic Holi¬ 
ness Union. 

Counties of Caroline and 
Talbot. 

Private corporation. 

State of Maryland. 

King’s Daughters and Sons.. 

Private corporation. 

Methodist Protestant Church 


Homeless unemployed men.. 

Fallen girls, homeless women, 
and children. 

Dependent women. 

Aged women. 


Disabled volunteer soldiers 
and sailors. 


Destitute aged women. 

Aged persons. 

Impoverished aged persons... 

Aged persons and orphans... 

Women and girls receiving 
less than SS per week. 
Widows of Confederate vet¬ 
erans. 

Working girls. 

Destitute women and children 
Fallen girls and their infants. 

Homeless men. 

Homeless aged persons. 

Immigrants and seamen. 

Fallen girls and their infants. 
Homeless men and women... 
Needy aged persons. 


Fallen women. 

Incurable women. 

Destitute aged persons. 

Aged members of the church. 

Fallen women and neglected 
children. 

Fallen women and delin¬ 
quent girls. 

Young working girls. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 

Dependent aged persons. 

Fallen women and their in¬ 
fants. 

Impoverished aged women... 


Impoverished aged gentle¬ 
women. 

Confederate veterans. 

Female epileptics... 

Impoverished aged persons.. 
Aged members of the church. 


1901 

1882 

1900 

1878 

1865 


1889 

1870 

1811 

1892 

1900 

1905 

1890 
1908 
1896 
1894 
1881 

1900 

1906 

1891 

1867 

1869 

1883 

1869 

1868 
1866 

1892 
1896 

1901 
1881 
1908 

1902 
1891 

1888 

1894 

1903 

1895 


Amount of entrance fee asked. 

Amount asked per week. 

Colored persons received. 

Paid employees at close of 

year. 

INMAT 

DUR 

73 

+-> 

O 

H 

ES RECI 
ING YEj 

© 

73 

a 

-IVED 

VR. 

© 

73 

a 

© 

fa 



(i) 

6 

161 

161 


3 $10 


Yes. 

6 

49 

16 

33 

100 

6$4.50 

No. 

2 

1 


1 

150 


No. 

4 

4 


4 


Yes. 

428 

565 

565 


100 

4.00 

No 

2 




150 

( 7 ) 

2 

4 

1 

3 

( 8 ) 


No. 

6 

11 

3 

8 

(*) 


No. 

5 

3 

3 


( 9 ) 

No. 

16 

64 


64 


No. 

1 

2 


2 


2.50 

No. 

4 

52 


52 


No. 

0) 

101 


101 



No. 

2 

143 

33 

110 



Yes. 

12 

3,021 

3,021 


150 


No. 

7 

12 

4 

8 


5.00 

No. 

2 

532 

334 

198 


3.50 

No. 

1 

50 

13 

37 



No. 

7 

15 

6 

9 


( 9 ) 

No. 

4 

6 

3 

3 



No. 

2 

151 


151 

500 


No. 

13 

4 


4 



Yes. 


82 

40 

42 

200 


No. 

17 

15 

4 

11 



No. 


102 


102 



( 7 ) 

3 

121 


121 


2.50 

No. 

2 

96 


96 



(i) 

12 

309 

309 


150 


Yes. 

4 

4 


4 



No. 


42 

2 

40 

200 


No. 

6 

1 


1 

250 


No. 

2 

1 


1 



No. 

9 

17 

17 



n 5.75 

No. 

8 

4 


4 

250 


No. 

1 

8 


8 

300 


No. 

2 

5 

2 

3 


1 No rule against admission. 

2 Equipment. 

a If a hospital case, $50. 


< Not reported. 

5 For borders only. 

6 From U. S. Government. 

















































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


199 


OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 















































































































































































































200 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table III—HOMES FOR THE CARE OF ADULTS 


a> 


3 

a 

a 

o 


1 


2 


3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 
21 

22 

23 

24 

25 

26 

27 

28 

29 

30 

31 

32 

33 

34 

35 

36 

37 

38 

39 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


MASSACHUSETTS. 

Amesbury: 

Amesbury and Salisbury Home for Aged 
Women. 

276 Main St. 

Auburndale: 

Walker Home for Missionary Children. 


Beverly: 

Old Ladies’ Home. 

12 Lovett St. 

Boston: 

Benoth Israel Sheltering Home. 

15 Cooper St. 

Boston Home for Incurables. 

2049 Dorchester Ave. 

Boston Industrial Home. 

17 Davis St. 

Bumap Free Home for Aged Women. 

38 Pleasant St. (Dorchester). 

Charming Home. 

198 Bellevue St. 

Church Rescue Mission. 

1066 W ashington St. 

City Temporary Home. 

Chardon St. 

Cull is Consumptives’ Home. 

560 Blue Hill Ave. (Grove Hall Station). 
Florence Crittenton League of Compassion.. 
701 Massachusetts Ave. 

Free Home for Consumptives. 

428 Quincy St. (Dorchester). 

French Women’s Christian Home. 

212 West Newton St. 

Hebrew Ladies’ Home for Aged. 

21 Queen St. (Dorchester). 

Home for Aged Colored Women. 

22 Hancock St. 

Home for Aged Couples... 

409 Walnut Ave. (Roxbury). 

Home for Aged Men of Boston. 

133 West Springfield St. 

Home for Aged Women. 

64 Bartlett St. (Roxbury). 

Home for Aged Women. 

108 Revere St. 

Home for Friendless and Unfortunate Wo¬ 
men. 

4 Hawthorn St. 

Home for the Aged. 

424 Dudley St. 

House of Mercy. 

244 Townsend St. (Roxbury). 

House of the Good Shepherd. 

841 Huntington Ave. 

Immigrants’ Home. 

72 Marginal St. (East Boston). 

John Howard Industrial Home. 

560 Massachusetts Ave. 

Lutheran Immigrant Home. 

9 Henry St. (East Boston). 
Massachusetts Home for Intemperate Wo¬ 
men. 

2 Binney St. (Fenway Station). 

Mount Pleasant Home. 

59 Elm Hill Ave. (Grove Hall Station). 

Phineas Stowe Seamen’s Home. 

8 North Bennett St. 

Rachel L. Allen Memorial Home. 

135 South Huntington Ave. 

Roxbury Home for Children and Aged 'Wo¬ 
men. 

5 Burton Ave. (Roxbury). 

St. Francis Home and Orphanage. 

Fulda and Ellis Sts. (Roxbury). 

St. Joseph’s Home. 

41 East Brookline St. 

St. Luke’s Home for Convalescents. 

149 Roxbury St. (Roxbury). 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

134 Hampden St. 

Salvation A rmy Rescue Home. 

103 Train St. (Dorchester). 

Scandinavian Sailors’ and Immigrants’ 
Home. 

Ill Webster Street (East Boston). 

Talitha Cumi Maternity Home. 

206 West Brookline St. 


Supervised or conducted 
by— 


Private corporation. 


American Board of Commis¬ 
sioners for Foreign Mis¬ 
sions. 

Private corporation.. 


Private corporation.. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Episcopal City Mission. 

City of Boston. 

Private corporation. 

National Florence Critten¬ 
ton Mission. 

Young Ladies’ Charitable 
Association. 

French Congregational 
Church. 

Private corporation.. 

Private corporation.. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation.. 

Ladies Unity Club. 

Private corporation.. 

Private organization.. 


Little Sisters of the Poor.... 

Private corporation (Epis¬ 
copal). 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd. 

Woman’s Home Missionary 
Society, M. E. Church. 
Private corporation. 

Lutheran Augustana Synod. 

Private corporation. 


Private corporation.. 

Boston Ladies’ Bethel Soci¬ 
ety. 

Trinity Church.. 

Private corporation. 


Holy Trinity Church. 

Sisters of Charity. 

Private corporation (Epis¬ 
copal). 

Salvation Army. 

Salvation Army.. 

Eastern Missionary Associa¬ 
tion. 

New England Moral Reform 
Society. 


Class of inmates received. 

T3 

© 

a 

3 

o 

u 

03 

© 

Amount of entrance fee asked. 

Amount asked per week. 

Colored persons received. 

Paid employees at close of 

year. 

INMATES RECEIVED 
DURING YEAR. 

*03 

+-< 

O 

© 

a 

© 

a 

© 

fa 

Homeless aged women.. 

1874 

$100 


Yes. 

2 

i 


i 

Foreign missionaries and 

186S 

i $4.25 

( 2 ) 

5 

37 

14 

23 

their children. 









Destitute aged women. 

1900 

100 


Yes. 

3 

( 2 ) 

’( 2 ) 

’ ( 2 ) 

Homeless Hebrew travelers 

1891 


Yes. 

4 

2,100 

2,100 

and immigrants. 







Incurables 3 . 

1884 

(<) 

(6) 

Yes. 

25 

7 


7 

Homeless men and women... 

1877 

3.50 

Yes. 

30 

2,511 

1,962 

549 

Impoverished aged women .. 

1878 



No. 

5 

3 


3 

Consumptive women and 

1857 



No. 

10 

37 


37 

girls. 









Homeless unemployed men.. 

1891 



Yes. 

27 

7,926 

7,926 


Homeless women and chil- 

1862 


2 2.00 

Yes. 

5 

1,836 

271 

1,565 

dren. 









Indigent consumptives. 

1864 



Yes. 

19 

65 

34 

31 

Fallen women and their in- 

1908 

( 8 ) 


Yes. 

12 

134 


134 

fants. 









Indigent consumptives. 

1892 



Yes. 

8 

108 

74 

34 

W orking girls. 

1901 


4.00 

No. 

2 

126 


126 

Indigent aged Hebrews. 

1905 



Yes. 

7 

12 

4 

8 

Indigent aged women. 

1860 



Yes. 

6 

3 


3 

Aged couples. 

18S4 

400 


No. 

17 

8 

4 

4 

Homeless aged men. 

1861 

150 


No. 

19 

8 

8 


Homeless aged women... 

1902 

500 


Yes. 

3 

1 


1 

Indigent aged American wo- 

1849 

150 


No. 

33 

8 


8 

men. 








Fallen or homeless women 

1878 



No. 


25 


25 

and their infants. 









Destitute aged persons. 

1870 



Yes. 


52 

29 

23 

Fallen women and their in- 

1890 



No. 

4 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

fants. 






Fallen women and unprotec- 

1867 



Yes. 

11 

476 


476 

ted girls. 









Needy immigrants. 

1888 


3.50 

Yes. 

4 

652 

326 

326 

Discharged prisoners. 

1890 



Yes. 

6 

559 

559 


Immigrants, seamen, and 

1905 


i 4.00 

( 9 ) 

5 

750 

485 

265 

emigrants. 









Intemperate women. 

1871 



No. 

9 

115 


115 

Worthy aged persons. 

1901 

io 300 


(S) 

14 

12 

3 

9 

Deep-sea sailors..•. 

1846 


5.00 

No. 

2 

100 

100 


Aged female members of the 

18S8 


4.00 

No. 

4 




church. 









Aged women and homeless 

1855 

300 


No. 

6 

2 


2 

children. 


"4 







Aged women and orphans.... 

1891 


2.00 

No. 

36 

10 


10 

Unemployed women. 

1865 


3.00 

Yes. 

10 

1,002 


1,002 

Needy convalescent women.. 

1872 



Yes. 

7 

277 


277 

Homeless unemployed men.. 

1903 



( 3 ) 

10 

273 

273 


Fallen women and their in- 

1893 



Yes. 

6 

135 


135 

fants. 









Scandinavian sailors and im- 

1901 


i 1.25 

Yes. 

6 

1,389 

1,207 

182 

migrants. 









Fallen women and their in- 

1836 

( 8 ) 

3.50 

Yes. 

9 

S3 


83 

fants. 










1 Average of maximum and minimum amounts. 4 Varies. 

2 Not reported. 5 According to ability to pay. 

3 Exclusive of tubercular, cancer, and mental cases. 6 Includes woodyard. 












































































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


201 


OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 



INMATES PRESENT AT CLOSE OF 

YEAR. 



RECEIPTS 

DURING 

YEAR. 


PAYMENTS DURING 

YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number 

Adults. 

Children. 

Total. 

Derived from — 

• 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

Total. 

© 

a 

© 

•a 

a 

© 

• 

sg 

a| 

© "O 

Ph 

G G 

^ a 
2 -g 

o G 

S & 
h" 5 

T3 S 

as © 

•+J 

o 

^© 

a 

© 

a 

© 

PR 

6 

T3 . 

o c 

Z & 

rG © 

o 

G 

♦-* 

Sg 

© 

G 

© 

3 

C 

a 

'© 

Q 

Appro¬ 

pri¬ 

ations. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources. 

6 


6 

6 









$ 2,073 


S 3 24 

S 100 

SI , 649 

SI ,577 

SI , 577 


* 48,886 

* 11,000 

S 37,886 

1 

8 


8 

2 

6 


16 

11 

5 

7 

9 


13,491 


6,500 

5,000 

1,991 

13,491 

6,991 

S 6,500 

60,450 

22,000 

38,450 

2 

7 


7 

7 









3,664 


2,143 

1,521 

1,698 

1,698 

30,887 

6,000 

24,887 

3 

10 

10 


10 









2,457 


2,457 


2,227 

2,227 


8,500 

8,500 

4 

41 

11 

30 

41 



9 

1 

8 

9 



22,732 


490 

1,640 

20,602 

19,249 

13,480 

5 , 769 ' 

457,934 

25,000 

432,934 

5 

125 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


125 








6 42,706 


1,450 

4,710 

6 36,546 

6 42,383 

6 41,462 

921 

6 58,617 

6 58,500 

117 

6 

19 

19 

19 









5,407 


4,731 

676 

3,544 

3,544 


35,000 

20,000 

15,000 

7 

19 


19 

19 



3 


3 

3 



10,392 


3,361 


7,031 

11,639 

10,816 

823 

174,379 

30,000 

144,379 

8 

37 

37 



37 








( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

9 

14 


14 


14 


4 

2 

2 

2 

2 


7,439 

$7 009 

430 

7,439 

7,439 

100,000 

100,000 


10 

25 

13 

12 

25 


5 

2 

3 

5 



22,861 


16,041 

6,820 

22,890 

22,890 


201,065 

185,399 

15,666 

11 

31 


31 



31 

4 

4 


4 



19,200 


12,838 

3,696 

2,666 

19,284 

13,361 

5,923 

35,000 

35,000 


12 

27 

18 

9 

27 



3 


3 

3 



14,163 


14,163 

10,931 

10,931 

64,000 

64,000 


13 

7 


7 

7 








2,826 


547 

2,041 

238 

2,805 

2,805 




14 

52 

22 

30 

52 









14,481 


5,136 

919 

8,426 

14,181 

12,681 

1,500 

45,000 

40,000 

5,000 

15 

18 


18 


18 








8,832 


460 


8,372 

8,377 

2,199 

6,178 

177,030 

20,000 

157,030 

16 

50 

25 

25 

50 









143,791 


115,691 

2,300 

25,800 

40,194 

15,874 

24,320 

757,014 

139,100 

617,914 

17 

46 

46 


46 









69,935 


27,786 

42,149 

74,394 

45,824 

28,570 

846,826 

50,000 

796,826 

18 

8 


8 

8 









( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

15,000 

10,000 

5,000 

19 

88 


88 

88 









48,550 


1,405 

47,145 

62,109 

54,941 

7,168 

1 , 117,824 

234,378 

883,446 

20 

5 


ft 



5 







3,020 


3,000 

20 


3,000 

3,000 





21 

215 

100 

115 

215 




9 





11,482 


11,482 



13,562 

12,517 

1,045 

104,100 

104,100 


22 

28 

28 


28 

23 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


23 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 

-( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 

23 

341 


341 

53 

64 

224 

175 

175 

175 



77,421 

2,703 


74,718 

81,846 

68,865 

12,981 

405,000 

405,000 


24 

5 

m 

m 

5 




4,237 


3,622 

615 

4,237 

4,237 


11,500 

11,500 


25 

40 

\ ) 

40 

\ ) 


40 








6 26,594 


11,389 


6 15,205 

6 22,042 

6 22,042 


6 28,024 

6 22,250 

5,774 

26 

25 

23 

2 


25 








7 , 732 


2,297 

4,936 

499 

6,952 

6,877 

75 

21,056 

21,056 


27 

56 

56 


56 








15,538 


4,699 

608 

10,231 

15,256 

13,106 

2,150 

45,000 

35,000 

10,000 

28 

44 

7 

37 

44 









32,421 


23,199 

1,652 

7,570 

33,841 

17,127 

16,714 

112,883 

96,124 

16,759 

29 

10 

10 

10 








2,483 


618 

1,845 

20 

2,483 

2,483 


7,000 

7,000 


30 

17 

17 

17 








6,879 


3,946 

2,933 


6,682 

5,582 

1,100 

40,000 

40,000 


31 

29 


29 

29 









14,053 


2,945 

11,108 

13,714 

9,734 

3,980 

182,702 

20,000 

162,702 

32 

in 


10 

10 



26 

13 

13 

26 



2,757 


203 

2,297 

257 

5,770 

5,628 

142 

29,700 

29,700 


33 

51 


51 


51 




10,163 


1,227 

6,682 

2,254 

6,372 

5,007 

1,365 

18,000 

18,000 


34 

16 


16 


16 








18,310 


5,338 


12,972 

9,509 

9,131 

378 

193,278 

27,620 

165,658 

35 

QO 

QO 


00 








41,583 



41,583 

2,349 

31,124 

31,124 


n 6,842 

ii 6,842 


36 

yu 

«7U 

98 



98 

14 


m 


14 


6,813 


4,464 


6,900 

5,510 

1,390 

12,900 

12,900 


37 

Zo 

2ft 

Q5 



35 


V ) 

\ / 

. 


12,936 

100 

4, 686 

8,150 


12,263 

9,005 

3,258 

30,000 

30,000 


38 

21 


21 


21 

3 

2 

1 


3 

«• • 

9,207 


5,229 

2,070 

1,908 

9,407 

1) 

9,107 

300 

81,799 

12,778 

69,021 

39 


7 For State wards only. 10 And all property owned. 

8 Confinement- fee, if able. 11 Equipment. 

9 No rule against admission. 




































































































































































































































































Institution number. 


202 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table III.—HOMES FOR THE CARE OF ADULTS 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


Supervised or conducted 
by— 


Class of inmates received. 


MASSACHUSETTS—Continued. 


40 

41 

42 

43 

44 

45 

46 

47 

48 

49 

50 

51 

52 

53 

54 

55 

56 

57 

58 

59 


60 

61 

62 

63 

64 

65 

66 

67 

68 

69 

70 

71 

72 

73 


B oston—C ontinued. 

Temporary Home for Working Women. 

453 Shawmut Ave. 

The Refuge. 

32 Rutland St. 

Washington Home. 

41 Waltham St. 

Wayfarers’ Lodge. 

30 Hawkins St. 

Welcome House... 

9 Florence St. 

Winchester Home for Aged Women. 

10 Eden St. 

Braintree: 

Abbie Crafts Wade Home. 

29 Quincy Ave. (East Braintree). 
Brocton: 

Wales Home for Aged Women. 

553 North Main St. 

Cambridge: 

Baptist Home. 

308 Brookline St. 

Cambridge Homes for Aged People. 

360 Mount Auburn St. 

Chelsea: 

Old Ladies’ Home. 

3 Washington Square. 

Soldiers’ Home in Massachusetts. 

Chicopee: 

Sherman Rest Home. 

259 Chicopee St. 

Concord: 

Concord’s Home for the Aged. 

22 Walden St. 

Danvers: 

Danvers Home for the Aged. 

Park St. 

Fall River: 

Fall River Rescue Miss on. 

63 Fourth St. 

Girls’ Industrial Home. 

29 Berkeley St. 

Home for Aged People. 

1168 Highland Ave. 

Fitchburg: 

Fitchburg Home for Old Ladies. 

14 Cedar St. 

Framingham: 

Home for Aged Men and Women in Framing¬ 
ham. 

Worcester and Pleasant Sts. 

Gardner: 

Gardner Home for Elderly People. 

162 Pearl St. 

Georgetown: 

Carleton Home. 

North St. 

Gloucester: 

Gilbert Home for Aged and Indigent Persons. 
1 Western Ave. 

Huntress Home. 

110 Prospect St. 

Haverhill: 

Haverhill Deaconess Home. 

Lowell Ave., R. D. 2. 

Old Ladies’ Home. 

119 Main St. 

Holyoke : 

Beaven-Kelly Home. 

Springfield Road. 

Father Harkin’s Home. 

Elm St. 

Holyoke Home for Aged People 10 . 

Morgan St. 

Lawrence: 

Lawrence Home for Aged People. 

Berkeley St. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

28 Medford St. 

Leominster: 

Leominster Home for Old Ladies. 

16 Pearl St. 

Lowell: 

Ayer Home... 

Pawtucket St. 

Battles Home. 

15 Belmont St. 


Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

City of Boston. 

St. Stephen’s Church. 

Private corporation. 

Private individual. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation (Baptist) 
Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

State of Massachusetts. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Fall River Deaconess Home. 
Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Trustees of George H. Carle- 
ton Endowment. 

Private corporation. 

City of Gloucester. 

New England Deaconess 
Association of Methodist 
Episcopal Church. 

Private corporation. 

Sisters of Providence. 

Sisters of Providence. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Salvation Army. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 


Unemployed women and girls 

Erring girls. 

Inebriate men. 

Unemployed men. 

Erring young women, chiefly 
court cases. 

Aged women. 

Invalid men and women. 

Needy aged women. 

Aged members of the church. 
Impoverished aged persons... 

Impoverished aged women... 

Veterans. 

Working women and girls.... 

Impoverished aged persons... 

Worthy aged persons. 

Destitute or degraded men... 

Homeless young girls. 

Worthy aged persons. 

Indigent aged women. 

Indigent aged men and wo¬ 
men. 

Aged Protestant Americans.. 

Impoverished aged persons... 

Indigent and aged persons.... 
Indigent aged women. 

Working girls and fresh-air 
children. 

Needy aged women. 

Aged men. 

Aged women. 

Worthy aged persons. 

Needy aged persons. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 

Indigent aged women. 

Young women and children.. 
Aged men. 


Year founded. 

Amount of entrance fee asked 

Amount asked per week. 

Colored persons received. 

1878 


i $3.00 

Yes. 

1818 


2 2.00 

No. 

1857 

$10 

10.00 

Yes. 

1878 



Yes. 

1906 



No. 

1865 

100 


Yes. 

1889 


2 8.50 

No. 

1893 

250 


No. 

1891 

200 


Yes. 

1887 

300 


No. 

1887 

150 


No. 

1882 



Yes. 

1903 


4.50 

No. 

1886 

4 100 


No. 

1899 

200 


No. 

1895 


( 6 ) 

Yes. 

1907 



( 7 ) 

1891 

4 200 


( 7 ) 

1883 

4 200 


No. 

1886 

150 


No. 

1894 

150 


Yes. 

1902 

4 100 


( 7 ) 

1889 

300 

4.00 

No. 

1889 

( 8 ) 


No. 

1902 


( 8 ) 

Yes. 

1856 

200 


No. 

1909 

-y- 

2 4.25 

No. 

1899 

2 750 

2 4.00 

No. 

1911 

500 


( 7 ) 

1895 

4 250 


No. 

1908 



( 7 ) 

1891 

200 


No. 

1870 



Yes. 

1901 

200 . 

No. 


Paid employees at close of 

year. 

inmates received 

DURING YEAR. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

6 

533 


533 

5 

13 


13 

10 

834 

834 


8 

25,478 

25,478 


8 

198 


198 

8 

5 


5 

4 

5 

1 

4 

4 

2 


2 

9 

3 


3 

10 

5 

1 

4 

2 

1 


1 

72 

330 

330 


.... 

19 


19 

2 

1 


1 

2 

2 

1 

1 

14 

2,001 

2,001 


7 

38 

2 

36 

8 

1 

1 


4 

1 


1 

4 




5 

1 


1 

1 

1 


1 

3 

1 


1 

3 

1 


1 

6 

540 

( 9 ) 

( 9 ) 

7 

4 


4 

3 

17 

17 


4 

23 


23 

5 

24 

4 

20 

5 

41 

41 


5 

1 


1 

15 

33 

21 

12 

2 

1 

1 



1 For State wards only. 

2 Average of maximum and minimum amounts. 

3 Includes $47,800 from U. S. Government. 


4 And all property owned. 
6 Night’s lodging, 10 cents. 
6 Equipment. 














































































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


203 


OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


INMATES PRESENT AT CLOSE OF YEAR. 


RECEIPTS 

DURING 

YEAR. 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 

0 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Adults. 

Children. 

Total. 

Derived from— 

Total. 

For „ 
running 
ex¬ 
penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

Total. 

© 

la 

a 

*3 

a 

© 

Ph 

Permanently 

dependent. 

Temporarily 

dependent. 

Wayward or 
delinquent. 

+5 

O 

© 

a 

© 

'c3 

a 

© 

Orphan or de¬ 

pendent. 

Received with 

parent. 

Delinquent. 

Appro¬ 

pri¬ 

ations. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources. 

20 


20 


20 








$S,020 


$1,075 

$412 

$6,533 

$6,094 

$6,094 


$75,361 

$15,000 

$60,361 

40 

18 


18 



18 







3,917 


461 

3,456 

2,980 

2,980 


82,400 

45,000 

37,400 

41 

22 

22 



22 








15,087 



13,042 

2,045 

14,681 

13,368 

$1,313 

77,090 

30,000 

47,090 

42 

64 

64 



64 








11,694 

$11,694 


11,694 

11,694 

43 

34 


34 



34 







8,557 

6,703 


1,854 

7,640 

7,640 


43,682 

25,682 

18,000 

44 

33 


33 

33 









11,464 


448 

1,138 

9,878 

8,935 

8,935 


149,211 

30,000 

119,211 

45 

14 

5 

9 


14 








3,100 



3,100 

2,900 

2,800 

100 

46 

18 


18 

18 









2,323 


1,118 

570 

635 

3,664 

3,664 


9,764 

675 

9,0S9 

47 

33 

2 

31 

33 









13,871 


10,695 

600 

2,576 

7,839 

7,718 

121 

47,414 

10,000 

37,414 

48 

41 

10 

31 

41 









17,748 


1,578 


16,170 

11,995 

11,995 


276,874 

76,631 

200,243 

49 

9 


9 

9 









4,342 


1,329 


3,013 

2,909 

1,824 

1,085 

70,000 

10,000 

60,000 

50 

541 

541 


541 









8 145,800 

8 139,800 

6,000 


143,800 

143,800 

442,000 

442,000 


51 













130 

15 


115 

163 

163 


5,752 

3,500 

2,252 

52 

6 

1 

5 

6 









2,919 


1,299 


1,620 

1,877 

1,790 

87 

46,309 

7,500 

38,809 

53 

1 


] 

1 









2,397 


1,144 

200 

1,053 

1,645 

1,601 

44 

23,890 

6,000 

17,890 

54 

33 

33 



20 

13 







4,634 


1,600 

384 

2,650 

5,019 

5,019 


8 900 

8 900 


55 

9 

1 

8 

1 

8 


29 


29 

29 



2,611 


211 


2,400 

2,611 

2,611 


30,000 

5,000 

25,000 

56 

26 

5 

21 

26 








10,991 


5,090 


5,901 

7,896 

7,667 

229 

161,212 

50,000 

111,212 

57 

15 


15 

15 



• 






2,565 


317 


- 2,248 

3,014 

3,014 


65,174 

26,000 

39,174 

58 

10 


10 

10 









4,043 


1,961 


2,082 

3,473 

3,473 


48,899 

12,500 

36,399 

59 

6 


6 

6 









4,107 



4,107 

2,808 

2,808 


87,000 

10.000 

77,000 

60 

1 


1 

1 









1,707 



298 

1,409 

838 

838 


37,575 

2,500 

35,075 

61 

6 


6 

6 









3,573 


300 


3,273 

1,537 

1,537 


80,738 

9,031 

71,707 

62 

11 


11 

H 









2,433 


404 


2,029 

2,872 

2,872 


2S, 287 


28,287 

63 

9 


9 

2 

6 

1 







(») 


2,076 

( 9 ) 

( 9 ) 

( 9 ) 

( 9 ) 

( 9 ) 

12,000 

12,000 


64 

25 


25 

25 









10,487 


5,800 

800 

3,887 

8,810 

7,839 

9J1 

100,000 

10,000 

90,000 

65 

32 

32 


32 









6,496 

/ 

848 

4,311 

1,337 

6,626 

6,626 


75,000 

75,000 


66 

50 

50 

50 









3,067 



3,067 


2,814 

2,814 


20,000 

20,000 


67 



















68 


m 

f9\ 










26,965 


7,624 

6,627 

12, 714 

10,505 

10,505 


127,660 

40,000 

87,660 

69 

10 

10 



10 








5,769 



5,769 

5,998 

5,998 


8 520 

8 520 


70 

g 

g 

8 








2,852 




2,852 

2,852 

2,852 


76,861 

18,575 

58,286 

71 

IS 


18 

18 


100 

( 9 ) 

(») 

98 


2 

14,951 


2,360 


12,591 

12,693 

11,511 

1,182 

342,534 

25,200 

317,334 

72 

4 

4 

4 






1,641 


1,357 


2S4 

1,43S 

1,438 


8,000 

6,000 

2,000 

73 



.... 




















1 


r No rule against admission. 
8 Varies. 


f Not reported. 
io Not opened until 1911 





















































































































































































































204 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table III.—HOMES FOR THE CARE OF ADULTS 


INMATES RECEIVED 
DURING YEAR. 



© 

"c3 

02 

a 

O 



ft 

S 




• 

4 


4 

274 


274 

152 

152 


2 

2 


1 


1 

300 

300 


5 


5 

11 

3 

8 

4 


4 

383 

5 

378 

267 

267 


12 


12 

130 

60 

70 

1,500 

1,500 


2 

2 


2 


2 

1 


1 

4 

2 

2 

4 


4 

2 


2 

3 


3 

1 


1 

7 

7 


5 


5 

2 

2 


(<) 

(<) 

(<) 

12 


12 

89 

89 


12 

1 

11 

144 

65 

79 

4 

1 

3 


3 

a 

3 

3 

3 

o 


74 

75 

76 

77 

78 

79 

80 
81 
82 

83 

84 

85 

86 

87 

88 

89 

90 

91 

92 

93 

94 

95 

96 

97 

98 

99 

100 

101 

102 

103 

104 

105 

106 
107 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


MASSACHUSETTS—Continued. 

Lowell—C ontinued. 

Old Ladies’ Home. 

520 Fletcher St. 

St. Patrick’s Home. 

Cross St. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

Liberty Square. 

Lynn: 

Lynn Homo for Agen Men. 

34 Forest St. 

Lynn Home for Aged Wbmen. 

197 North Common St. 

Lynn Workingmen’s Home. 

13 Commercial St. 

Malden: 

Malden Home for Aged Persons. 

526 Main Street Park. 

Medford: 

Medford Home for Aged Men and Women... 
66 South St. 

Methuen: 

Henry C. Nevins Home for Aged and Incur¬ 
ables. 

Broadway. 

Milton: 

Leopold Morse Home... 

100 Blue Hill Parkway (Mattahan). 

Milton Convalescent Home. 

Edge Hill Road. 

New Bedford: 

Mariners’ Home and Seamen’s Bethel. 

15 Bethel St. 

New Bedford Home for Aged. 

396 West Middle St. 

St. Mary’s Home. 

Kempton and Liberty Sts. 

Workingmen’s Home and. Woodyard. 

25 South Water St. 

Newburyport: 

Home for Aged Men. 

333 High St. 

Old Ladies’ Home. 

75 High St. 

Newton: 

Newton Home for Aged People. 

Elliot St. (Newton Upper Falls). 

Norfolk: 

King’s Daughters’ and Sons’ Home for the 
Aged in Norfolk County. 

Wrentham P. O. 

Northampton: 

Lathrop Home. 

236 South St. 

Peabody: 

Charles B. Haven Home for Aged Men. 

109 Lowell St. 

Sutton Home for Aged Women. 

143 Main St. 

Pittsfield: 

Berkshire County Home for Aged Women.. 
89 South St. 

Plymouth: 

Ryder Home for Old People. 

55 High St. 

Quincy: 

National Sailors’ Home... a. 

Wallston P. O. 


Sailors’ Snug Harbor of Boston. 

Palmer P. O. 

Reading: 

Reading Home for Aged Women. 

68 Linden St. 

Salem: 

Bertram Home for Aged Men. 

114 Derby St., Box 263. 

City Orphan Asylum. 

215 Lafayette St. 

Home for Aged and Destitute Women. 
180 Derby St. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

234 Bridge St. 

Somerville : 

Bethsaida Rescue Home. 

45 Temple St. 

Home for the Aged... 

186 Highland Ave. 

Somerville Home for the Aged. 

7 Grandview Ave. 


Supervised or conducted 
by— 


Private corporation. 
Franciscan Sisters... 
Salvation Army. 


Private corporation 
Private corporation 
Volunteers of America. 

Private corporation.... 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 


Private Corporation and 
Boston Federation of Jew¬ 
ish Charities. 

Private corporation. 


New Bedford Port Society.. 

Woman’s Loyal Union. 

Sisters of St. Francis. 

Ladies’ City Mission Society. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 


Private corporation. 

King’s Daughters and Sons. 

Private corporation. 


Private corporation. 
Private corporation. 


Private corporation.. 

Private corporation.. 

Private corporation.. 

Private corporation.. 

Private organization. 

Private corporation.. 

Sisters of Charity. 

Private corporation.. 
Salvation Army.. 


Private organization. 

Little Sisters of the Poor.. 
Private corporation. 


Class of inmates received. 


Aged women. 

Homeless women. 

Homeless unemployed men. 


Aged men. 

Aged American women. 
Unemployed men. 


Aged Protestant Americans. 

Aged Americans. 

Aged persons. 


Indigent Hebrews and their 
children. 

Convalescent women and 
children. 


Homeless seamen.. 

Aged men and women. 

Destitute persons.. 

Homeless men. 


Indigent aged men. 

Aged Protestant women. 

Aged persons. 

Aged persons.. 


Impoverished aged women... 
Aged men. 


Aged Protestant American 
women. 


Aged women. 


Aged and indigent men and 
women. 

Disabled sailors, mariners, 
and other employees, U. 
S. N. 

Aged American seamen. 


Aged Protestant women. 
Aged men. 


Aged women, invalids, and 
homeless children. 

Aged and destitute women.. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 


Fallen women and their in¬ 
fants. 

Destitute aged persons. 


Worthy aged persons. 


•v 

© 

■3 

3 

3 

o 


03 

OJ 


1867 

1896 

1905 

1890 

1874 

1902 

1892 

1901 

1906 

1888 

1886 

1830 

1897 
1894 
1853 

1886 

1835 

1898 

1899 

1884 

1903 
1890 

1890 

1891 

1865 
1852^ 
1899 

1877 

1866 
1860 
1908 

1907 
1889 
1S9S 


T3 

© 

44 


3 

© 

«— 

o 

3 

3 

O 

a 


$200 


250 

250 


275 

( 8 ) 

150 


( 5 ) 


100 

50 

250 

300 


100 

100 

300 

200 


200 


65 


200 


© 

is 

<3 

ft 

"3 

© 

44 


3 

3 

O 

a 

■< 


1 $3.00 


13.50 

i 1.25 


1.50 

3.50 

i 4.75 


3.00 


(<) 


i 2.25 


■3 

© 

> 

'© 

o 

© 

3 

O 

w 

C 

© 

ft 

■3 


O 

U 


No. 

Yes. 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

Yes. 

Yes. 

( 2 ) 

No. 

Yes. 

No. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No: 

No. 

( 2 ) 

No. 

No. 

(<) 

No. 

( 2 ) 

No. 

Yes. 

No. 


o 

© 

CD 

O 

o 

03 

w *-* 

o 

ft 

a 

© 

"3 

ft 


(<) 


1 Average of maximum and minimum amounts. 

2 No rule against admission. 


3 Single persons, $200; couples, $300. 
< Not reported. 













































































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


205 


OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


INMATES PRESENT AT CLOSE OF YEAR. 


Adults. 

Children. 

Total. 

Male. 

j Female. 

Permanently 

dependent. 

Temporarily 

dependent. 

Wayward or 
delinquent. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Orphan or de¬ 

pendent. 

Received with 

parent. 

Delinquent. 

42 


42 

42 









60 


60 

8 

52 








30 

30 



30 








6 

6 


6 









22 


22 

22 









10 

10 



10 








24 


24 

24 









8 

2 

6 

s 









50 

14 

36 

50 









5 

3 

2 

5 



57 

29 

28 

57 



10 


10 


10 


3 

1 

2 

3 



5 

5 



5 








5 


5 

5 









10 


10 

10 



172 

87 

85 

172 



65 

65 



65 








6 

6 


6 









18 


18 

18 









15 


15 

15 









15 

2 

13 

15 









9 


9 

9 









3 

3 

3 









8 


8 

8 









25 


25 

25 









7 

1 

6 

7 









11 

11 


11 









28 

28 


28 









10 

i ^ 

10 

10 









L5 

1 









< 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

< 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 5 

( 4 ) 

( 4 > 

( 4 ) 

31 


31 

31 









15 

15 

15 








3 

3 


3 

2 


2 


2 



120 


295 









15 

3 

12 

15 










RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 


Total. 


$22,477 
9,242 
11,483 

8,545 
7,451 
700 

7,251 

I, 787 
15,318 

12,371 

5,658 

3,035 
2,126 
9,190 
8 6,799 

3,061 

4,698 

6,179 

3,104 

3,159 

2,814 
7,847 

8,26' 

5,471 

18,204 

II, 390 
2,630 

.8,265 

(«) 
115,134 
7,687 

426 

7,857 

7,503 


Derived from- 


Appro- 

pri- 

ations. 


$380 


48 


Dona¬ 

tions. 


$15,800 


Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 


3,785 
2,364 
300 

1,039 

1,767 


10,297 

5,301 

846 

472 

5,064 

180 

9 

1,060 

3,703 

1,887 

807 

10 

3,961 

2,829 

824 

66 


( 4 ) 


523 


( 4 ) 

84,446 


347 

2,457 

608 


$311 

9,242 


1,464 


346 


485 
4,126 
100 

399 


650 

1,023 

150 


( 4 ) 


79 


6 Residents, $150; nonresidents, $200. 
8 Includes woodyard. 



PAYMENTS DURING 

YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

















£ 




For 


Land, 


a 



For 

perma- 


build- 

Tn- 

2 

P 


Total. 

running 

nent 

Total. 

mgs, 

vested 

P 

Other 

snurpps 


ex¬ 

penses. 

im¬ 

prove- 


and 

equip- 

funds. 

•H 

2 




ments. 


ment. 


4-> 

•H 








a 








HH 

$6,366 

$8,099 

$8,099 


$127,868 

$41,150 

$86,718 

74 


8,648 

8,155 

$493 

53,500 

53,500 


75 

11,483 

14,006 

14,006 


12,753 

12,753 


76 

3,296 

5,340 

2,816 

2,524 

76,147 

13,424 

62,723 

77 

5,087 

4,678 

4,678 


120,400 

24,100 

96,300 

78 

400 

800 

800 





79 

6,212 

7,251 

7,251 


103,939 

52,000 

51,939 

80 

20 

2,334 

2,334 


7,000 

6,500 

500 

81 

15,318 

15,318 

8,850 

6,468 

( 4 ) 

125,000 

( 4 ) 

82 

1,694 

13,198 

12,695 

503 

94,462 

61,179 

33,283 

83 

11 

6,153 

6,153 


1,964 


1,964 

84 

2,189 

2,355 

2,355 


45,540 

9,630 

35,910 

85 

1,121 

1,407 

1,254 

153 

55,060 

30,328 

24,732 

86 


35,983 

9,190 

26,793 

76,793 

76,793 


87 

6 6,519 

8 16,650 

6 6,650 

10,000 

10,000 

10,000 


88 

2,653 

2,405 

2,050 

355 

78,221 

17,322 

60,899 

89 

3,638 

4,651 

4,302 

349 

100,789 

23,600 

77,189 

90 

2,476 

5,638 

5,638 


51,500 

1,500 

50,000 

91 

567 

3,448 

3,448 


26,949 

14,300 

12,649 

92 

1,329 

2,960 

2,136 

824 

29,500 

4,500 

25,000 

93 

2,654 

1,652 

1,652 


30,235 

6,600 

23,635 

94 

3,886 

6,039 

2,515 

3,524 

51,369 

9,116 

42,253 

95 

5,438 

8,139 

8,139 


143,772 

40,050 

103,722 

96 

4,647 

1,842 

1,842 





97 

18,138 

21,743 

15,367 

6,376 

276,428 

50,000 

226,428 

98 

11,390 

8,281 

8,281 


275,795 

40,000 

235,795 

99 

2,107 

1,674 

1,674 


15,359 

4,500 

10,859 

100 

8,265 

6,671 

6,671 


166,441 

7,500 

158,941 

101 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

102 

30,688 

107,310 

12,727 

94,583 

334,531 

58,000 

276,531 

103 

7,687 

5,451 

5,451 


8 1,092 

8 1,092 


104 

417 

417 


8 200 

8 200 


105 

5 400 

13,399 

13,399 


90,000 

90,000 


106 

6,895 

3,486 

3,486 


34,954 

13,000 

21,954 

107 


7 For boarders. 

8 Equipment. 











































































































































































































































206 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table III.— HOMES FOR THE CARE OF ADULTS 



108 

109 

110 
111 
112 

113 

114 

115 

116 

117 

118 

119 

120 

121 

122 

123 

124 

125 

126 

127 

128 

129 

130 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 

9 

10 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


MASSACHUSETTS—Continued. 

Springfield: 

House of the Good Shepherd. 

Wilbraham Road. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

124 Dwight St. 

Springfield Home for Aged Men.. 

74 Walnut St. 

Springfield Home for Aged Women. 

471 Chestnut St. 

Springfield Home for Friendless Women and 
Children (Adult Department). 5 
136 William St. 

Springfield Rescue Mission Home. 

36 Willow St. 

Taunton: 

Home for Aged and Indigent Females. 

96 Broadway. 

Wakefield: 

Wakefield Home for Aged Women. 

5 Bennett St. 

Waltham: 

Leland Home for Aged Women. 

21 Newton St. 

Watertown: 

Sunny Bank Home. 

240 School St. 

Westfield: 

Sarah Gillett Home for Aged People. 

41 Broad St. 

Winchester : 

Home for Aged People. 

2 Kendall St. 

Woburn: 

Woburn Home for Aged Women.. 

74 Elm St. 

W ORCESTER: 

Door of Hope.. 

15 Salem St. 

Home for Aged Colored People.. 

10 Liberty St. 

Home for Aged Men.. 

1199 Main St. 

Home for Aged Women.... 

1183 Main St. 

Odd Fellows’ Home of Massachusetts. 

North Ave. 

St. Francis Home. 

37 Thome St. 

St. Joseph’s Home for Business Girls. 

50 High St. 

St. Vincent Home. 

73 Vernon St. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

134 Southbridge St. 

Temporary Home and Day Nursery. 

10 Edward St. 

MICHIGAN. 

Alma: 

Michigan Masonic Home. 

Ann Arbor: 

Old Ladies’ Home of Ann Arbor.. 

403 North State St. 

Battle Creek: 

James White Memorial Home.. 

37 Aldrich St. 

Bay City: 

Old Ladies’ Home.. 

923 North Monroe St. 

Byron Center: 

Michigan Home for Girls. 

R. D. 64. 


Detroit: 

Arnold Home for Old Ladies. 

114 Selden Ave. 

Florence Crittenton Mission... 

187 East Elizabeth St. 

German Protestant Home for Orphans and 
Old People. 

1852 West Grand Boulevard. 

Home for the Aged.. 

45 Scott St. 

House of the Good Shepherd.. 

792 Fort St., west. 


Supervised or conducted 
by— 

Class of inmates received. 

Year founded. 

Amount of entrance fee asked. 

Amount asked per week. 

Colored persons received. 

Paid employees at close of 

year. 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd 

Fallen -women and wayward 

1893 


i $2.25 

Yes. 

3 


girls. 






Salvation Army 

Homeless unemployed men. 

1901 



(2) 

8 

Private corporation.... 

Aged American men. 

1897 

$400 


Yes. 

2 

Private organization. 

Aged women. 

1884 

500 


No. 

7 

Private corporation 

Homeless women. 

1865 


i 1.25 

Yes. 

18 

Private corporation . 

Homeless unemployed men 

1892 



Yes. 

2 

Private corporation.... 

Aged women. 

1829 

250 


No. 

5 

Private corporation. 

Aged Protestant women. 

1892 

200 


No. 

2 

Private corporation.. 

Aged American women 

1879 

300 


No. 

3 

Massachusetts Homeopathic 

Convalescents. 

1887 


i 11.00 

No. 

4 

Hospital. 







Private corporation.... 

Worthy aged persons. 

1899 


i 5.50 

No. 

6 

Private corporation... 

Aged persons. 

1894 

7 200 


No. 

2 

Private corporation. 

Aged Protestant women. 

1886 

200 


No. 

3 

Private corporation 

Fallen women and unpro- 

1894 



No. 

1 


tected girls. 






Private corporation_ 

Homeless aged persons... 

1900 

150 


Yes. 

1 

Private corporation. 

Aged men. 

1874 

200 


No. 


Private corporation. 

Indigent aged single women 

1869 

250 


No. 

10 

Independent Order of Odd 

Odd Fellows and their families 

1892 



No. 

18 

FeDows. 







Little Franciscan Sisters of 

Aged persons. 

1889 

i 900 

i 4.00 

Yes. 

33 

Mary. 







Sisters of Mercv. 

Young business women. 

1905 


13.50 

Yes. 

3 

Sisters of Providence. 

Aged persons. 

1894 

i 900 

1 4.50 

No. 

9 

Salvation Armv. 

Homeless unemployed men 

1903 



(2) 

8 

Private corporation. 

Temporarily dependent 

1887 


2.00 

Yes. 

8 


women and children. 






Masonic Grand Lodge of 

Masons, their families, 

1885 



No. 

8 

Michigan. 

mothers, and sisters. 






Private corporation. 

Impoverished aged women... 

1900 

i 800 


No. 

3 

Private corporation. 

Aged persons. 

1893 


(10) 

Yes. 

3 

Woman’s Association of 

Aged women. 

188& 

400 

No. 

5 

Charity. 







Private corporation. 

Homeless orincorrigible girls, 

1903 



Yes. 

1 


fallen women and their 







infants. 






Private corporation. 

Aged women. 

1900 

( 6 ) 

(») 

No. 

( 6 ) 

National Florence Crittenton 

Dependent or erring women 

1897 

(U) 

Yes. 

6 

Mission. 

and children. 






German Evangelical Synod 

German Protestant aged per- 

1894 

500 


No. 

10 

of North America. 

sons and children. 






Little Sisters of the Poor. . 

Destitute aged persons. 

1874 



Yes. 


Sisters of the Good Shepherd 

Fallen women and unpro- 

1889 


2.00 

Yes. 

8 


tected children. 







1 Average of maximum and minimum amounts. 

2 No rule against admission. 

3 Equipment. 

1 Includes report of Children’s Department. 


5 Children received, at 37 Buckingham St. 
6 Not reported. 

7 And all property owned. 


INMATES RECEIVED 
DURING YEAR. 



© 

? 

© 

a 

E-< 

a 

£ 

lit! 


184 

156 

156 


4 


4 

251 


251 

200 

200 


15 


15 

1 


1 

115 

1 

114 

( 6 ) 

( e ) 

( 8 ) 

2 


2 

2 


2 

45 


45 

1 


1 

2 

2 


2 


2 

14 

13 

1 

81 

33 

48 

105 


105 

19 

7 

12 

84 

84 


228 

98 

130 

7 

5 

2 

3 


3 




18 


18 

(«) 


( s ) 

357 

94 

263 

2 

1 

1 

66 

34 

32 

240 


240 

























































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


207 


OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN: 1010—Continued. 



INMATES PRESENT AT CLOSE OF 

YEAR. 


RECEIPTS 

DURING 

YEAR. 


PAYMENTS DURING 

YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Adults. 

Children. 

Total. 

Derived from — 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

73 

o 

£ 

73 

a 

© 

73 

a 

© 

Ph 

v>. 

fl d) 
©~ 

S a 

a ® 

a g. 

u> © 

© >d 

Oh 

r~ G 

b ® 
2-0 
o a 
a® 

a & 

©-C 

-H 

t-4 

d § 

% a 
g cr 

c3 © 

«*■ 

3 

+5 

o 

Eh 

c 

■3 

S 

£ 

*03 

a 

© 

Ph 

6 

^ . • 

o a 

Z, © 

S'a 
g a 
^ © 
PhPh 

>—1 

0 

a 

M 

gg 

> >3 
© Q, 
© 

+-> 

a 

© 

3 

cr 

.3 

73 

A 

Appro¬ 

pri¬ 

ations. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources. 

88 


88 



88 

28 


28 



28 

$25,741 


$4,664 

$1,960 

*19,117 

$25,540 

$18,602 

$6,938 

$96,400 

$96,400 


23 

23 



23 








13,766 


13,7fifi 

11,407 

11,407 

3 3,818 

3 3,818 


5 

5 


5 









3,698 




3,698 

2,486 

2,219 

267 

72,600 

8,600 

$64,000 

32 


32 

32 









21,455 


12,690 


8,765 

8,915 

8,915 


208,774 

54,000 

154,774 

21 


21 


21 








4 25,206 


1,206 

1,518 

22,482 

4 19,422 

11,222 

8,200 

4 178,017 

40,000 

138,017 

10 

10 



10 








26,817 

$21,035 

2,946 

2,836 

5,431 

5,431 

50,000 

50,000 

14 


14 

14 









12,987 

10,375 


2,612 

12,987 

4,601 

8,386 

64,241 

14,300 

49,941 

5 


5 

5 









8,400 


7,529 


871 

1,870 

1,743 

127 

27,874 

6,000 

21,874 

6 


6 

6 









2,192 



2,192 

1,965 

1,809 

156 

63,385 

23,000 

40,385 

8 


8 


8 








1,086 



1,086 


4,092 

4,092 


20,000 

20,000 

16 

1 

15 

16 









4,529 



4,043 

486 

4,529 

4,389 

140 

33,682 

33,215 

467 

5 


5 

5 









1,862 


962 

200 

700 

1,750 

1,750 


19,204 

5,000 

14,204 

11 


11 

11 









3,519 


343 

• 

3,176 

3,519 

3,059 

461 

65,158 

9,000 

56,158 

1 


1 



1 







1,216 


1,081 


135 

1,287 

1,287 


3,469 

3,469 

6 


6 

4 

2 








681 


156 


525 

354 

327 

27 

1,800 

1,800 

8 

8 


8 









16,3S9 


11,510 


4,879 

2,383 

2,383 


133,822 

19,900 

113,922 

27 

27 

27 









24,713 


17,250 

680 

6,783 

11,060 

10,629 

431 

191,058 

49,700 

141,358 

89 

59 

30 

89 









30,718 


3,948 


26,770 

22,266 

21,861 

405 

240,130 

160,000 

80,130 

126 

70 

56 

126 









24,249 


1,945 

13,463 

8,841 

22,534 

22,534 


81,428 

81,428 

41 

41 


41 








( 8 ) 


( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

90 

32 

58 

90 









(») 


( 9 ) 

( 9 ) 

( 9 ) 

( 9 ) 

( 9 ) 

( 9 ) 

( 9 ) 

( 9 ) 

28 

28 



28 








16,326 


16,326 

13,374 

13,374 

3 3,839 

3 3,839 


15 

15 


15 


7 

3 

4 

7 



4,420 


3,528 

133 

759 

35,634 

4,288 

31,346 

59,631 

40,200 

19,431 

57 

3S 

18 

57 

4 









12,668 


12,668 



12,366 

12,366 

( 8 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

4 

4 









3,300 


2,000 

300 

1,000 

2,100 

1,800 

300 

S,000 

5,000 

3,000 

ii 


6 

H 









4,099 


1,638 

2,461 

2,043 

2,043 


8,084 

6,000 

1 

2,084 

16 


16 

ie 









2,835 


362 

123 

2,350 

2,800 

2,725 

75 

23,000 

5,000 

18,000 

Q 


s 


9 







1,137 


427 

125 

585 

1,137 

709 

428 

7,000 

7,000 

. 




(6) 









(12) 


(12) 

(12) 

(!2) 

(IS) 

(IS) 

(IS) 

(IS) 

(IS) 


\ ) 


^ / 


34 


59 

3S 

2" 

35 

23 

1 

6,737 


3,836 

2,701 

200 

9,294 

8,294 

1,000 

8,000 

8,000 

. 

oy 


Ov 

Of 


98 

5£ 

4' 

98 


10,475 


3,101 

7,374 

10,374 

9,612 

762 

44,000 

44,00C 

. 


li 

1 1 

9( 

201 

... 





8,777 


8,777 


7,608 

6 ,3D 

1,290 

151,169 

150,OOC 

1,169 

174 


174 


174 

149 


141 

44 


105 

(*) 

( e ) 

( 6 ) 


( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 6 ) 

. 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 



s Included in report of Orphanage of Our Lady of Mercy, 
s Included in report of St. Vincent Hospital. 
io According to ability to pay. 


11 Varies. 

1 2 Included in report of Arnold Hospital for Incurables. 

1 3 Confinement fee, $35 if able. 


a 

p 

a 

- 

o 


10S 

109 

110 
111 
112 

113 

114 

115 

116 

117 

118 

119 

120 

121 

122 

123 

124 

125 

126 

127 

128 

129 

130 

1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 

9 

10 





































































































































































































































208 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table III.—HOMES FOR THE CARE OF ADULTS 


.a 

S 

3 

3 

e 

o 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


Supervised or conducted 
by— 


Class of inmates received. 


a 

MICHIGAN—Continued. 


11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 


Detroit— Continued. 

Phyllis Wheatley Home. 

176 East Elizabeth St. 

St. Luke’s Hospital Church Home and 
Orphanage. 

1287 Fort St., west. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

330 Lafayette Ave. 

Salvation Army Rescue Home. 

896 Fort St. west. 

Thompson Home for Old Ladies. 

Cass Ave. and Hancock St. 

Fenton: 

Baptist Ministers’ Home. 


17 


Grand Rapids: 

Clark Memorial Home. 
704 Sherman St. 


18 

19 

20 


Holland Home. 

North College Ave. 

Home for the Aged. 

158 Lafayette St. 

House of the Good Shepherd 
315 Walker Ave. 


21 


Michigan Soldiers’ Home. 


22 

23 

24 

25 

26 

27 

28 
29 


Rest Cottage. 

779 East Fulton St. 

Richard Allen Home. 

195 Bates St. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 
167 William St. 

Salvation Army Rescue Home. 

1230 South Division St. 

Woman’s Home and Hospital.. 

69 Bostwick St. 

Jackson: 

Handy State Missionary Home... 
1317 North Lansing Ave. 

Jackson Friendly Home.. 

North St. 

Odd Fellows’ Home of Michigan... 


Marengo: 

30 Dulcenia Home for Aged and Indigent Fe¬ 

males. 

Marshall P. O. 

Monroe: 

31 Old Folks’ Home (Altenheim). 


Private corporation.. 

Private corporation (Epis¬ 
copal). 

Salvation Army. 

Salvation Army. 

Private corporation. 


Baptist Ministers’ Aid So¬ 
ciety. 

Methodist Episcopal Church. 


Private corporation. 

Little Sisters of the Poor. 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd. 


State of Michigan. 

International Apostolic 
Holiness Union. 

Woman’s Loyal Bible 
League. 

Salvation Army. 

Salvation Army. 

Woman’s Christian Tem¬ 
perance Union. 

African Methodist Episcopal 
Church. 

Private corporation. 

Independent Order of Odd 
Fellows. 

Private corporation. 


Lutheran Missouri Synod.... 


Aged colored women. 

Aged persons and orphans 


Homeless unemployed men... 

Fallen women and their chil¬ 
dren. 

Aged women. 


Baptist ministers, mission¬ 
aries, and their families. 

Aged ministers, their wives, 
and aged members of the 
church. 

Aged persons. 

Destitute aged persons. 

Fallen women and their in¬ 
fants, and delinquent chil¬ 
dren. 

Veterans, their mothers, 
wives, and widows. 

Homeless girls and fallen 
women and their infants. 

Homeless women and chil¬ 
dren. 

Homeless unemployed men... 

Fallen women and their in¬ 
fants. 

Homeless aged women. 


Aged ministers, their wives, 
and other worthy persons. 

Homeless women, and chil¬ 
dren committed by court. 

Odd Fellows and their fami¬ 
lies. 

Impoverished aged women_ 


Aged men and women 


1 


MINNESOTA. 


Anoka: 

Ladies of G. A. R. Home. 


2 


Belle Plaine: 

Evangelical Lutheran Home 


3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 

13 


Chicago City: 

Bethesda Old People’s Home. 

Dover: 

Bethesda Homes. 

Willmar P. O. 

Duluth: 

Bethel Rescue Home. 

430 Sixth Ave., east. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home 
1605 Michigan St. 

Minneapolis: 

Bethany Home. 

3719 Bryant Ave., south. 

Florence Crittenton Home. 

2014 Twenty-sixth Ave., south. 

Home for Children and Aged Women 
3200 Stevens Ave. 

Home for the Aged. 

215 Broadway. 

Jones-Harrison Home. 

Cedar Lake Boulevard. 

Lutheran Hospice. 

828 Sixth St., south. 

Minnesota Soldiers’ Home. 


14 


Salvation Army Industrial Home 
115 North First St. 


Ladies of the G. A. R. of 
Minnesota. 

United Lutheran Synod of 
Wis., Minn., Mich., and 
Other States. 

Lutheran Augustana Synod. 
Lutheran Free Church. 


Duluth Bethel Society 
Salvation Army. 


Private corporation. 

National Florence Critten¬ 
ton Mission. 

Private corporation. 

Little Sisters of the Poor_ 

Woman’s Christian Associa¬ 
tion. 

Lutheran Tuner Mission 
Society. 

State of Minnesota.. 

Salvation Army.. 


Soldiers’ widows, mothers, 
and sisters. 

Lutherans from the Synod.... 


Aged persons. 

Aged persons and orphans.... 


Fallen women and their in¬ 
fants. 

Homeless unemployed men. 


Fallen women and their in¬ 
fants. 

Young girls committed by 
court. 

Aged women and children.... 

Indigent aged persons. 

Aged Protestant women. 

Working girls, transient, and 
convalescent women. 

Veterans, their mothers, 
wives, and widows. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 


33 

3 

3 

O 


1897 
1861 

1904 

1900 

1875 

1887 

1906 

1892 

1884 

1904 

1885 

1905 

1907 

1906 
1896 

1886 

1906 

1878 

1904 

1S98 

1893 

1898 
1S98 

1904 

1898 


1902 

) 

1910 


1876 

1897 

1881 

1889 

1887 

1907 

1887 

1S99 


"3 

S3 


tu 

o 

3 

3 

1-4 

fl 

© 


o 

a 


$300 


* 900 
100 


4 400 


1150 


1 100 


500 


500 


( 9 ) 


( 10 ) 


S3 

is 


•3 

03 

44 


3 

3 

o 

a 


$2.00 


3.00 


1.00 


4 5.50 


4 2.00 


3.00 


u 300 


400 


( 3 ) 


12 1.50 


<3.63 


<13 

P< 

*3 

a 

t- 

_o 

o 

O 


Yes. 

No. 

(») 

Yes. 

No. 

No. 

0) 

No. 

Yes. 

No. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

( 6 ) 

(>) 

Yes. 

Yes. 

( s ) 

No. 

No. 

(») 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

( l ) 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

No. 

No. 

Yes. 

0) 


C/3 » 
*1 

a 

a 

<S 

■3 

'3 

a 


li 


5 

5 

5 

254 

( 3 ) 

4 

4 


2 

2 

8 

9 

3 

4 

4 

2 

20 

7 

8 
97 
15 


1 No rule ■against admission. 

2 Equipment. 

3 Not reported. 

4 Average of maximum and minimum amounts. 


6 Colored only. 

« Estimated. Records destroyed by fire. 
i For persons other than ministers or their wives. 


INMATES RECEIVED 
DURING YEAR. 



£ 



OS 

a 


a 


1$ 

o 

© 

a 

a 


l 


i 

4 

2 

2 

225 

225 


144 


144 

2 


2 

3 


3 

5 

1 

4 

11 

7 

4 

30 

18 

12 

13 


13 

612 

538 

74 

20 


20 

30 


30 

59 

59 


94 


94 

35 


35 

1 


1 

30 


30 

9 

5 

4 

4 


4 

16 

7 

9 

8 


8 

1 

1 


10 

6 

4 

18 

13 

5 

92 

9 

83 

22 

22 


111 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

45 


45 

175 

89 

86 

40 

30 

10 

2 


2 

828 


828 

149 

124 

25 

152 

152 
























































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


209 


OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


INMATES PRESENT AT CLOSE OF YEAR. 


RECEIPTS 

DURING 

YEAR. 


PAYMENTS DURING 

YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Adults. 

Children. 

Total. 


Derived from- 

» 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

Total. 

£ 

*c3 

a 

Female. 

Permanently 

dependent. 

Temporarily 

dependent. 

W ay ward or 
delinquent. 

c3 

-*-> 

O 

£ 

a 

Female. 

Orphan or de¬ 

pendent. 

Received with 

parent. 

Delinquent. 

Appro¬ 

pri¬ 

ations. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources. 

9 


9 

9 









$2,500 

$2,000 

$500 



$3,000 

$3,000 


$6,000 

$6,000 


11 

28 

9 

19 

27 

1 








5,056 

38 

$79 

$4,939 

9,978 

9,353 

$625 

109,500 

$109,500 

12 

25 

25 



25 








17,151 


17,151 

13,976 

13,976 


2 5,277 

2 5,277 

13 

14 


14 



14 

6 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


6 


6, 745 


5,873 


872 

7,126 

3,881 

3,245 

11,000 

1 

11,000 


14 

32 


32 

32 







9,589 


1 404 

2,500 

5,685 

7,135 

7,135 

164,321 

50,000 

114,321 

15 

14 

1 

13 

14 









13,648 


7,081 

6,567 

8,923 

8,923 


66,996 

18,900 

48,096 

16 

13 

3 

10 

13 









4,917 


( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

4,541 

4,541 


92,990 

53,800 

39,190 

17 

52 

35 

17 

52 









7,750 


1,000 

6,200 

550 

7,250 

7,250 


8,000 

8,000 

18 

153 

90 

63 

153 






/ 



13,136 


13,136 

17,466 

17,466 


49,072 

49,072 


19 

7 

7 



7 

65 


65 


5 

60 

17,311 




17,311 

17,165 

17,165 


50,000 

50,000 


20 

1 221 

1 078 

143 

1 221 









175,000 

175,000 




175,000 

175,000 


427,050 

427,050 


21 

7 


7 



7 

5 

3 

2 

5 



1,106 

1,106 



1,098 

1,098 


5,000 

5,000 


22 

6 2 


6 2 


6 2 


6 3 

6 1 

62 


6 3 


6 480 


6 480 



6 357 

6 177 

6 180 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


23 

20 

20 



20 








10,088 




10,088 

10,886 

10,886 


8,138 

8,138 


24 

13 

13 


13 

10 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


10 


2,718 


2,718 



2,814 

2,814 


4,200 

4,200 


25 

16 


16 

14 

2 





2,661 

198 

460 

1,875 

128 

2,307 

2,003 

304 

15,624 

13,000 

2,624 

26 

3 

1 

2 

3 









823 


522 

301 


6,000 

6,000 


10,000 

10,000 


27 

31 


31 

30 


1 

9 


9 

9 



2,300 

200 

800 

1,200 

100 

4,600 

4,500 

100 

44,600 

40,000 

4,600 

28 

41 

31 

10 

41 



10 

6 

4 

10 



16,433 


16,433 


16,433 

11,607 

4,826 

89,095 

89,095 


29 

16 

16 

16 









4,707 


200 


4,507 

3,339 

2,929 

410 

59,445 

26,751 

32,694 

30 

58 

33 

25 

58 









7,355 


1,600 

5,155 

600 

7,152 

5,877 

1,275 

27,802 

27,802 


31 

25 

25 

25 









3,180 

2,500 

680 


2, S00 

2,500 

300 

20,000 

20,000 


1 

26 

15 

11 

26 









2,400 

1,200 


1,200 

2,750 

2,300 

450 

21,500 

11,000 

10,500 

2 

32 

19 

Q 

13 

32 









7,871 


5,992 

1,879 

7,426 

4,826 

2,600 

21,000 

15,000 

6,000 

3 

in 

9 

10 



44 

25 

19 

44 



5,379 


4,354 

125 

900 

5,148 

4,148 

1,000 

30,000 

30,000 


4 

IU 




A 

o 

1 5 

Q 



15 


2 515 


1,400 

1,083 

32 

2,514 

2,514 

7,000 

7,000 


5 

12 

19 

1 9 

14 


4 

12 

o 

10 





1,995 



1,995 

2,069 

2,069 


21,000 

2 1,000 


6 

70 


70 


70 

54 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

1 

54 



6,337 

3,000 

425 

2,400 

512 

7,500 

6,500 

1,000 

( 3 > 

( 3 ) 

3,800 

i 

14 


14 



14 

1 


1 


1,110 


952 

156 

2 

1,175 

1,175 


3,634 

3,500 

134 

8 

on 


90 

on 


97 

50 

47 

97 



49,419 




49,419 

19,821 

19,821 


300,000 

40,000 

260,000 

9 

2U 

1 QtC 


nn 

19S 





5,548 


5,448 

100 

6,400 

3,999 

2,401 

75,000 

75,000 


10 

loD 

OQ 

i O 

oc 

28 









6,019 


1,895 


4,124 

5,495 

5,495 


88,928 

50,000 

38,928 

11 

95 


25 

25 








7,382 


. 1,425 

5,907 

50 

7,292 

6,466 

826 

35,000 

35,000 


12 



C9 

511 

17 








13 94,750 

13 94,750 



98,958 

98,958 


1 500,000 

500,000 


13 

o2 o 

A O 

49 

oo 

Oil 

42 








12,270 




12,270 

11,675 

11,675 


2 3,290 

2 3,290 


14 

42 

44 















1 





s And all personal property. 11 For women. 

9 Varies. 12 For children. 

10 Confinement fee, $25 if able 13 Includes $34,750 from U. S. Government. 


44153°—14-14 



















































































































































































































































































210 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table III.—HOMES FOR THE CARE OF ADULTS 


.O 

s 

I 

G 

o 


15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

\ 

20 
21 
22 

23 

24 

25 

26 

27 

28 
29 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 
17 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


MINN E SO T A—Continued. 

Minneapolis— Continued. 

Scandinavian Home of Shelter. 

3428 Oakland Ave. 

Travelers’ Aid Home. 

1714 Stevens Ave. 

New Ulm: 

St. Alexander Old People’s Home. 

Northfield: 

Odd Fellows’ Home and Orphan Asylum 

St. Cloud: 

St. Joseph’s Home. 

R. D. 1. 

St. Paul: 

Church Home of Minnesota. 

587 Fuller St. 

Colored Orphanage and Old Folks’ Home. 
1537 Randolph St. 

Home for the Aged. 

90 Wilkin St. 

Home for the Friendless. 

469 Collins St. 

House of the Good Shepherd. 

Milton and Blair Sts. 

Jewish Home for the Aged. 

75 Wilkin St. 

St. Paul Bethel. 

316 Wahasha St. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

55 West Third St. 

Salvation Army Rescue Home. 

480 North St. 

Woman’s Christian Home. 

Albany and Hamlin Sts. 

MISSISSIPPI. 

Gulfport: 

Jefferson Davis Beauvoir Soldiers’ Home.. 


Meridian: 

Florence Crittenton Home. 

Fifteenth St. and Twenty-second Ave. 


MISSOURI. 

Hannibal: 

Home for the Friendless. 

501 North Sixth St. 

Higginsville : 

Confederate Soldiers’ Home of Missouri. 


Kansas City: 

Armour Home. 

Tracy Ave. and Twenty-second St. 

Florence Crittenton Home. 

3003 Woodland Court. 

Geo. H. Nettleton Home for Aged Women. 
626 Penn St. 

Helping Hand Institute. 

408 Main St. 

Home for the Aged. 

Thirty-first and Locust Sts. 

House of the Good Shepherd. 

Twentieth St. and Cleveland Ave. 

Kansas City Industrial Home for Girls. 

2940 Highland Ave. 

Old Folks’ and Orphans’ Home. 

2446 Michigan Ave. 

Rest Cottage. 

2033 Brighton St. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

1709 Walnut St. 

Liberty: 

Odd Fellows’ Home of Missouri. 


Mexico: 

King’s Daughters’ Home. 

St. James: 

Federal Soldiers’ Home of Missouri. 


St. Joseph: 

Memorial Home for Aged People.. 
1120 Maine St. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 
Seventh and Messanie Sts. 


Supervised or conducted 
by— 


Private corporation. 

Woman’s Christian Associa¬ 
tion. 

St. Alexander Hospital. 

Independent Order of Odd 
Fellows. 

Sisters of St. Benedict. 

Private corporation (Epis¬ 
copal). 

Private corporation. 

Little Sisters of the Poor. 

Private corporation. 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd 

Private corporation. 

Bethel Association. 

Salvation Army. 

Salvation Army. 

Minnesota Magdalen Society 

State of Mississippi. 


National Florence Critten¬ 
ton Mission. 


Private corporation. 
State of Missouri.... 


Woman’s Christian Associa¬ 
tion. 

National Florence Critten¬ 
ton Mission. 

Private corporation. 


Private corporation. 

Little Sisters of the Poor. 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd 
Private corporation. 


Colored People’s Christian 
Charity Association. 
Private Corporation. 


Salvation Army. 


Independent Order of Odd 
Fellows. 

King’s Daughters and Sons. 
State of Missouri. 


Ladies’ Union Benevolent 
Association. 

Salvation Army. 


Class of inmates received. 


1 According to ability to pay. 

2 Not reported. 

3 Included in report of St. Alexander’s Hospital. 

4 From $16 to $35 per month. 


Fallen women. 


Girls seeking employment 
and women traveling. 

Aged persons and children.... 

Odd Fellows and their fami¬ 
lies. 

Aged men and women. 


Aged women. 


Homeless aged persons and 
children. 

Indigent aged persons. 


Destitute women and chil¬ 
dren. 

Fallen women and unpro¬ 
tected girls. 

Aged men and women. 


Working men and women, 
and needy persons. 

H meless unemployed men.. 

Fallen women and their chil¬ 
dren. 

Fallen girls and their infants.. 


Confederate veterans, their 
wives, widows, and war 
body servants. 

Fallen women and their in¬ 
fants. 


Friendless women and chil¬ 
dren. 


Confederate veterans 
their families. 


and 


Impoverished aged couples.. 

Unprotected girls, fallen 
women and their infants. 
Destitute aged gentlewomen. 

Homeless unemployed per¬ 
sons and children. 

Aged persons. 


Fallen women and dependent 
girls. 

Homeless undisciplined girls 
and children. 

Destitute aged persons and 
orphans. 

Fallen women and their in¬ 
fants. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 


Odd Fellows and their fami¬ 
lies. 


Aged women. 


Civil War veterans, then- 
wives and widows. 


Aged men and women. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 


T3 

s 


1907 

1883 

1884 
1900 

1900 

1894 

1903 
1883 

1867 

1868 

1908 

1872 

1904 

1898 

1873 

1903 

1899 

1882 

1891 

1904 
1896 
1890 
1894 
1882 
1887 

1894 
1§88 

1904 
1899 

1895 

1905 

1896 

1874 
1899 


T3 

© 

Pi 


G 

03 


o 

a 


( 2 ) 


( 6 ) 


$200 


‘ 3 600 
50 
300 


( 2 ) 


300 


400 


P: 

© 


© 

p, 

® 

M 


o 

a 

<! 


C 1 ) 

$ 6.00 

1.25 

( 4 ) 

3 3.75 
6 1.88 


2 1.25 


(! 2 ) 


.50 


(“) 

( 2 ) 


2.00 


•o 

© 

t> 


© 

P. 

*0 


o 

O 


No. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

Yes. 

No. 

No. 

Yes. 

No. 

Yes. 

( 10 ) 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

Yes. 

( 2 ) 

Yes. 

No. 

( l3 ) 

No. 

( 10 ) 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

( 10 ) 


p. 

a 

© 

08 

- 


JR c3 

© Qj 


2 

4 

34 

7 


4 

4 

5 
5 
3 

12 

9 

5 

3 

24 

( 2 ) 

3 

30 

3 

1 

7 

47 

( 2 ) 

4 
2 
1 

12 

19 

3 

36 

5 
3 


3 Average of maximum and minimum amounts. 

6 For residents, $300; nonresidents, $600. 

7 Includes “ care of inmates.” 

3 Included in “ donations.” 


INMATES RECEIVED 
DURING YEAR. 



© 

o3 

O 

© 

*c3 

a 

© 

Eh 

a 


25 


25 

1,200 


1,200 

169 

87 

82 

13 

6 

7 

54 

31 

23 

3 


3 

25 

11 

14 

36 

19 

17 

2 


2 

77 


77 

2 

1 

1 

4,700 

3,500 

1.200 

136 

136 


231 

101 

130 

60 


60 

81 

64 

17 

20 


20 

100 

14 

86 

57 

42 

15 

6 

3 

3 

44 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

5 


5 

7,171 

6,845 

326 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

300 


300 

65 


65 

38 

18 

20 

44 


44 

346 

346 


23 

14 

9 

116 

84 

32 

1 


1 

52 

52 












































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


211 


OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


( 2 ) 

36 

20 

86 

13 

9 

137 

19 
175 

10 

260 

31 

20 
18 

180 

( 2 ) 

5 

324 

17 

13 

29 

215 

( 2 ) 

70 

4 

13 

8 

54 

56 

12 

220 

29 

7 


INMATES PRESENT AT CLOSE OF YEAR 


Adults. 


25 

10 

41 


6 

244 

31 


145 


275 


213 

( 2 ) 


54 

37 


147 


t>> 


S & 

o 
© *73 

r\ 


2*0 
o - 

Q, V 

a a 
a o> 
<y -a 
& 


( 2 ) 

11 

10 

45 

13 

2 

57 

19 

175 

4 

16 


20 

18 

35 

( 2 ) 

5 

49 

9 

13 

29 

2 

( 2 ) 

70 

4 

12 

8 


19 

12 

73 

21 


a 

T3 ® 
*= 3 
a 

c3 © 


( 2 ) 


36 

20 

86 

3 

6 

137 

19 


180 


324 

17 


29 

16 


( 2 ) 


13 


56 

12 

220 

29 


50 


125 


255 

31 

2 


199 

( 2 ) 


54 


15 

18 


( 2 ) 


Children 


o 


( 2 ) 

7 

28 


21 


cO 

— 

^4 


( 2 ) 


48 

1 


13 


( 2 ) 

70 


( 2 ) 

28 

1 


( 2 ) 


108 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


53 


( 2 ) 

3 

13 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


<6 

T3 . 

° 9 

2 £ 
rd © 

O 


28 


15 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


55 


28 


( 2 ) 


108 


46 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 


Total. 


$1,049 

2,407 

( 3 ) 
17,542 

4,794 

3,045 
1,986 
( 2 ) 
5,735 
24,700 
2,65' 
26,650 
12,416 
3,805 
3,201 


47,406 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

55,350 

4,627 

6,664 

9,865 

26,588 

( 2 ) 

14,240 

4,200 

1.230 

910 

34,949 

62,582 

2,430 

86,354 

5,089 
5,164 


Derived from— 


Appro¬ 

pri¬ 

ations. 


( 3 ) 


$47,406 


( 2 ) 
55,350 


200 
2,700 
( 2 ) 


86,354 

420 


Dona¬ 

tions. 


$851 

1,261 

( 3 ) 


519 


Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 


Other 

sources, 


469 

( 2 ) 

3,000 
24,700 
7 2,657 
1,050 


1,911 

677 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


288 
6,664 
6, OSS 
9,575 
( 2 ) 
5,040 
4,200 
737 
910 


62,582 
2,400 


300 


s For room. 

io No rule against admission, 
n Equipment. 

« No weekly charge; $65 for four months. 


$966 

( 3 ) 

3,443 

11,975 

1,593 

968 


( 8 ) 


1,602 
2,412 


( 2 ) 


1,800 


$198 

180 

( 3 ) 
14,099 

2,300 

1,452 
549 
( 2 ) 
2,735 


25,600 

12,416 

292 

112 


( 2 ) 


2,539 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 



3,577 

7,648 

6,665 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

200 

9,000 

234 

259 


34,949 


30 

810 

3,559 


5,164 


Total. 


$1,032 

2,328 

( 3 ) 
12,552 

37,115 

2,548 
1,986 
( 2 ) 

5,127 
24,575 
2,048 
24,550 
11,745 
3,690 
3,310 

47,396 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

53,650 

4,675 
7,502 
6,322 
27,318 
( 2 ) 

14,140 
2,965 
1,230 
907 
29,940 

52,776 

2,400 

86,354 

4,720 

5,519 


For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 


$1,032 

2,328 

( 3 ) 
12,552 

11,735 

2,548 

1,437 

( 2 ) 
5,127 
20,630 
2,048 
22,550 
11,201 
3,690 
2,995 

34,990 

800 

( 2 ) 

43,650 

4,675 

1,102 

6,322 

17,318 

( 2 ) 
12,640 
1,965 
930 
907 
28,782 

28,264 

2,400 

83,477 

4,720 

5,403 


For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 


$28,000 
< 3 ) 


25,380 


549 


3,945 


2,000 

544 


315 

12,406 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

10,000 


6,400 


10,000 
( 2 ) 
1,500 
1,000 
300 


VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 


Total. 


1,158 

24,512 


2,877 


116 


$4,500 

18,000 

( 3 ) 
87,719 

44,600 

10,000 
11,000 
( 2 ) 
60,000 
150,000 
10,000 
55,000 
» 2,764 


31,000 

125,000 

8,000 

( 2 ) 

135,658 

106,000 
20,000 
38,080 
21,631 

( 2 ) * 
80,000 
8,000 
6,000 
800 
n 6,794 

350,000 

10,500 
105,000 

( 2 ) 
ii 1,283 


Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 


In¬ 

vested 

funds. 


$4,500 

10,000 

( 3 ) 

78,143 

44,600 

10,000 

10,000 

( 2 ) 

10,000 
150,000 
10,000 
55,000 
n 2,764 


30,000 

125,000 

8,000 

( 2 ) 

135,658 

55,000 
20,000 
16,000 
21,631 
( 2 ) 
80,000 
8,000 
6,000 
800 
u 6,794 

350,000 

10,000 

105,000 

( 2 ) 

n 1,283 


13 For each couple. 

14 Lodging 10 and 15 cents per night, 
is Colored only. 


9,576 


1,000 

50,000 


1,000 


( 2 ) 


<s> 

rO 

a 

3 

3 

a 

o 


51,000 

22,080 

( 2 ) 


500 


48,000 


15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 
21 
22 

23 

24 

25 

26 

27 

28 
29 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 
17 











































































































































































































































212 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table III.—HOMES FOR THE CARE OF ADULTS 


Amount of entrance fee asked. 

Amount asked per week. 




( 2 ) 


8150 

( 4 ) 






400 





300 



( 6 ) 


O 

o 

• 

S 

2,000 

250 







(i°) 


( ll ) 
















( 2 ) 



6.00 

300 







Colored persons received. 

Paid employees at close of 

year. 

INMATES RECEIVED 
DURING YEAR. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

No. 

0) 

M 

0) 

C 1 ) 

No. 

2 

6 


6 

No. 

1 

134 

0) 

0) 

Yes. 

1 

3 

1 

2 

No. 

1 

80 


80 

No. 

6 

4 

3 

1 

No. 

- - - - 

62 

37 

25 

No. 

15 

10 


10 

No. 

10 

111 


111 

No. 

3 

7 

4 

3 

No. 

6 

10 

5 

5 

No. 

20 

24 

16 

8 

No. 

11 

12 

8 

4 

No. 

4 

0) 

( l ) 

C 1 ) 

No. 

44 

767 

182 

585 

No. 

9 

12 

5 

7 

( 8 ) 

9 

320 

320 


Yes. 

- - . . 

227 

30 

197 

No. 

.... 

56 

35 

21 

No. 

5 

462 


462 

Yes. 

23 

36 

36 


No. 

2 

76 

22 

54 

Yes. 


60 


60 

No. 

2 

1 

1 


No. 

4 

6 

1 

5 

Yes. 

61 

74 

57 

17 

( s ) 

5 

19 

19 


Yes. 

8 

52 

11 

41 

Yes. 

15 

26 

23 

3 

No. 

6 

0) 

C 1 ) 

0) 

Yes. 

5 

84 


84 

No. 

5 

9 

4 

5 

No. 

6 

3 


3 

( 8 ) 

3 

56 

56 


Yes. 

.... 

132 

27 

105 

No. 

9 

8 

5 

3 


0) 

,Q 

a 

3 

3 

3 

o 

’■3 

3 

*-3 

a 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


18 

19 

20 

21 

22 

23 

24 

25 
20 

27 

28 

29 

30 

31 

32 

33 

34 

35 

36 

37 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 


MISSOURI—Continued. 

St. Louis: 

Bethany Home.. 

4205 North Eleventh St. 

Bethesda Old People’s Home. 

3660 Rutger St. 

Church Mission Home for Convalescent 

Women. 

100 North Leffingwell Ave. 

Colored Old Folks’ Home. 

9837 Eugenia St. 

Hephzibah Rescue Home. 

3014 Morgan St. 

Home for Aged and Infirm Israelites. 

3652 South Broadway. 

Home for the Aged. 

2209 Hebert St. 

Home for the Friendless. 

4431 South Broadway. 

House of the Good Shepherd. 

3801 Gravois Ave. 

Jewish Orthodox Old Home. 

1438 East Grand Ave. 

Lutheran Altenheim. 

1906 Lafayette Ave. 

Masonic Home of Missouri. 

5351 Delmar Boulevard. 

Memorial Home. 

2609 South Grand Ave. 

Nonsectarian Old People’s Home. 

3426 Franklin Ave. 

St. Ann’s Widows’ Home. 

5301 Page Boulevard. 

St. Louis Altenheim. 

5408 South Broadway. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

13 North Third St. 

Salvation Army Rescue and Maternity Home 
3740 Marine Ave. 

Second Home for the Aged. 

Cherokee St. and Grand Ave. 

Young Girls’ Home and Industrial School... 
Twenty-second and Morgan Sts 

MONTANA. 

Columbia Falls: 

Montana Soldiers’ Home. 

Helena: 

Florence Crittenton Home. 

Hauser Boulevard (Kenwood). 

House of the Good Shepherd. 

Montana Odd Fellows’ Home 12 . 


NEBRASKA. 

Blair: 

Crowell Memorial Home.... 


Grand Island: 

Nebraska Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Home. 
Burkett P. O. 

Lincoln: 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

1428 O St. 

Milford: 

Nebraska Industrial Home. 


Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Home. 


Omaha: 

House of Hope. 

958 North Twenty-seventh Ave. 

House of the Good Shepherd. 

Fortieth and Jones Sts. 

Nazareth Home for the Aged and Invalid... 
Thirty-fourth St. and Meredith Ave. 

Old People’s Home. 

2214 Wirt St. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

2734 Calwell St. 

Salvation Army Rescue Home. 

3824 North Twenty-fourth St. 

Plattsmouth: 

Nebraska Masonic Home. 

1319 Elm St. 


Supervised or conducted 
by— 


Class of inmates received. 


Pentecostal Training Home. 

Private corporation. 

Protestant Episcopal Church 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 


Jewish Charitable and Edu- 
cationalUnion of St. Louis. 
Little Sisters of thePoor... 


Private corporation. 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd 
Private corporation. 


Private corporation (Luth¬ 
eran). 

Masonic Grand Lodge of Mis¬ 
souri. 

St. Louis Woman’s Christ¬ 
ian Association. 

Private individual. 


Sisters of Charity. 

Private corporation. 

Salvation Army. 

Salvation Army. 

Little Sisters of the Poor.... 
Sisters of Mercy. 


State of Montana. 


National Florence Critten¬ 
ton Mission. 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd 
Independent Order of Odd 
Fellows. 


Methodist Episcopal Church 

State of Nebraska. 

Salvation Army.. 

State of Nebraska. 

State of Nebraska.. 


Private corporation. 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd 

Lutheran Augustana Synod 

Woman’s Christian Associa¬ 
tion. 

Salvation Army. 

Salvation Army.. 


Masonic Grand Lodge of 
Nebraska. 


Fallen girls and their infants, 
Aged women_.'.. 


Convalescent women and their 
children. 

Aged persons. 


Fallen women and their in¬ 
fants. 

Aged Hebrews. 


Destitute aged persons. 

Impoverished aged women... 

Fallen women and delinquent 
children. 

Destitute aged Hebrews. 


Aged members of the church. 

Masons and their families 

Respectable aged persons... 

Indigent aged persons. 

Aged women and foundlings. 

Aged men and women. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 

Fallen women and their chil¬ 
dren. 

Destitute aged persons. 


Working girls and homeless 
children. 


Veterans and their wives. 


Fallen women and their in¬ 
fants, and dependent chil¬ 
dren. 

Fallen women.. 

Odd Fellows and their fami¬ 
lies. 


Aged ministers and members 
of the church. 

Veterans, their wives and 
widows, and army nurses. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 


Homeless fallen women and 
their infants, and depen¬ 
dent children. 

Civil War veterans, then- 
wives and widows. 


Aged persons. 

Fallen or dependent women.. 

Aged, invalid, and incurable 
persons. 

Aged men and women. 


Homeless unemployed men.. 

Fallen women and their chil¬ 
dren. 

Masons and their families.... 


a 

3 

a 

U 

c3 

<x> 


1898 
1890 

1899 

1903 

1893 

1885 
1869 
1853 
1849 
1906 
1906 

1886 
1882 

1900 
1853 
1900 

1899 
1898 

1900 
1856 


1895 

1902 


1889 

1910 


1906 

1887 

1899 


1889 

) 

1895 


1906 

1894 

1903 

1883 

1899 

1896 

1903 


1 Not reported. 

2 According to ability to pay. 

s Included in report of Bethesda Incurable Hospital. 


* From $5 to 825 for nonresidents. 

6 Single persons, 8200; couples, 8300. 

6 Includes statistics of inmates for St. Ann’s Foundling Asylum. 















































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


213 


OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


INMATES PRESENT AT CLOSE OF YEAR. 


RECEIPTS 

DURING 

YEAR. 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Adults. 

Children. 

Total. 

Derived from— 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 
perma¬ 
nent 
im¬ 
prove- , 
ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

Total. 

© 

*c3 

a 

© 

a 

© 

Ph 

Permanently 

dependent. 

Temporarily 

dependent. 

W ay ward or 
delinquent. 

13 

■*-> 

o 

H 

© 

*03 

a 

© 

13 

a 

© 

Orphan or de¬ 

pendent. 

Received with 

parent. 

Delinquent. 

Appro¬ 

pri¬ 

ations. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources. 

10 


10 



10 

7 

0 ) 

C 1 ) 


C 1 ) 


(») 

(•) 

(*) 

( l ) 

c ) 

(>) 

0 ) 

0 ) 

0 ) 

(*) 

<») 

18 

43 


43 

43 









( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


(») 


( 3 ) 

c ) 


$ 30,000 

$ 30,000 


19 

16 


16 


16 


6 


6 


6 


$ 1,574 

$ 1,538 

$36 


$ 2,027 

$ 2,027 



20 

15 

3 

12 

15 









300 


300 



800 

600 

$200 

2,500 

2,500 


21 

20 


20 



20 

19 


19 


19 


4,148 


4,148 



3,699 

3,699 

10,000 

10,000 


22 

25 

14 

11 

25 









2,150 


1,490 


$660 

5,139 

5,139 


43,000 

27,000 

$ 16,000 

23 

200 

96 

104 

200 

. 








( i ) 

<>) 

( i ) 

( l ) 

(!) 

(') 

( i ) 

( l ) 

(!) 

( 1 ) 

(») 

24 

79 


79 

79 









15,449 

5,654 

1,900 

7,895 

18,822 

17,005 

1,817 

240,500 

100,000 

140,500 

25 

89 


89 

40 


49 

230 


230 



230 

( l ) 

0 ) 

( i ) 

0 ) 

( i ) 

( i ) 

(*) 

(!) 

(») 

(>) 

0 ) 

26 

24 

13 

11 

24 









9,077 

3,194 

5,883 

8,802 

4,802 

4,000 

14,720 

14,200 

520 

27 

30 

14 

16 

30 









5,900 


2,400 

820 

2,680 

4,545 

4,545 

25,000 

25,000 


28 

81 

33 

48 

81 



70 

40 

30 

70 



46,867 


38,804 


8,063 

35,678 

35,678 


311 , 1.53 

19,000 

121,153 

29 

103 

(l) 

(l) 

103 









14,641 


12,782 


1,859 

12,464 

12,464 


155,000 

100,000 

55,000 

30 

36 

12 

24 

29 

7 








750 


600 

150 


1,200 

1,200 


31 

65 


65 

65 



6 150 

« 53 

6 97 

« 150 



i 53,846 

$ 1,472 

3,680 

36,785 

11,909 

i 52,491 

47,791 

4,700 

i 500,000 

500,000 


32 

62 

21 

41 

62 









18,188 

4,834 

6,288 

7,066 

12,046 

11,498 

548 

154,175 

107,347 

46,828 

33 

57 

57 



57 








19,599 



19,599 

19,535 

19,235 

300 

3 3,845 

9 3,845 


34 

22 


22 



22 

13 

0 ) 

(') 


13 


2,732 


1,848 

884 

2,723 

2,723 


10,000 

10,000 


35 

175 

91 

84 

175 







0 ) 

0 ) 

0 ) 

0 ) 

(I) 

(») 

(>) 

(0 

(0 

0 ) 

(») 

36 

47 


47 


47 


53 


53 

53 



6,971 


6,221 

750 

6,921 

6,721 

200 

75,000 

75,000 


37 

91 

86 

5 

91 







32,181 

20,000 


12,181 

26,917 

24,707 

2,210 

85,000 

85,000 


1 

20 

20 


2 Q 1 

15 

9 

6 

15 



3,895 

1,572 

1,800 

523 

7,500 

3,500 

4,000 

6,500 

6,500 


2 

80 


80 



80 







13,500 

4,500 

500 


8,500 

20,000 

20,000 

100,000 

100,000 


3 

i 

1 

1 








( i ) 

( i ) 


( l ) 

<‘J 

eJ 

0 ) 

48,931 

36,931 

12,000 

4 

11 

3 

g 

H 









3,072 


2,272 

800 


3,000 

2,700 

300 

80,000 

80,000 


1 

371 

24] 

130 

371 









86,000 

78,000 


8,000 

126,000 

106,000 

20,000 

250,000 

250,000 


2 

g 

8 

g 








3,870 



3,870 

4,255 

4,019 

236 

9 1,031 

91,031 


3 

**n 


7 

q 

14 

23 

12 

11 

20 

3 


19,600 

19,600 



19,534 

13,910 

5,624 

51,500 

51,500 


4 

135 

125 

10 

135 





22,890 

22,890 




22,890 

22,890 


100,000 

100,000 


5 

30 

15 

15 

30 









5,000 

(i) 

0) 

0 ) 

5,000 

5,000 


10,000 

10,000 


6 

184 

1ft4 

15 


169 







30,401 


2,142 

28,259 

30,107 

27,731 

2,376 

135,000 

135,000 


7 

18 

g 

10 

16 

2 







8,119 


4,070 

943 

3,106 

7,176 

2,176 

5,000 

41,800 

40,000 

1,800 

8 

21 

3 

18 

21 









5,449 


1,413 

600 

3,436 

5,449 

4,809 

640 

28,875 

10,500 

18,375 

9 

Q 

0 

9 








4,645 




4,645 

4,298 

4,298 


» 2,480 

9 2,480 


10 

96 


96 



26 

9 

4 

5 

9 



4,585 


3,406 

1,179 


4,586 

3,828 

758 

7,500 

7,500 

. 

11 

29 

17 

12 

29 


2 

2 

. 

2 



22,018 


9,926 

410 

11,682 

20,149 

7,902 

12,247 

58,358 

41,358 

17,000 



7 includes financial statistics of St. Ann’s Widows’ Home, Foundling Asylum, and Maternity Hospital. 
* No rule against admission. 

» Equipment. 


From $2.50 to $3.50 for girls; children, $1.50. 
u Confinement fee, $25, if able. 
i J Opened December, 1910. 




































































































































































































































Institution cumber. 


214 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 




Table III.—HOMES FOR THE CARE OF ADULTS 


13 

14 


6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 


7 

8 

9 

10 

11 

12 

13 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


NEBRASKA—Continued. 


West Point: 

St. Joseph Home for the Aged. 
York: 

Odd Fellows’ Home i. 


NEW HAMPSHIRE. 

Concord: 

New Hampshire Centennial Home for the 
Aged. 

96 Pleasant St. 

New Hampshire Odd Fellows’ Home. 

Pleasant and Minot Sts. 

Dover: 

Wentworth Home for the Aged. 

795 Central Ave. 

Keene: 

Invalids’ Home. 

361 Court St. 

Laconta: 

Laconia Home for the Aged. 


Manchester: 

Gale Home. 

133 Ash St. 

House of St. John.. 

Clark and Ray Sts. 

Masonic Home.. 

813 Beech St. 

St. Patrick’s Home for Aged Women.. 

222 Hanover St. 

Women’s Aid Home.. 

180 Pearl St. 

Nashua: 

John M. Hunt Home for Aged Couples and 
Men. 

334 Main St. 

Protestant Home for Aged Women. 

104 Walnut St. 

Newport: 

Newport Home for Aged Women. 

Main St. 

Portsmouth: 

Home for Aged Women.. 

63 Deer St. 

Rochester: 

Gafney Home for the Aged.. 

90 Wakefield St. 

Tilton: 

New Hampshire Soldiers’ Home.. 

Winter St. 

NEW JERSEY. 


Atlantic City: 

Florence Crittenton Home. 

1216 Adriatic Ave. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 
12 North Ohio Ave. 

Beverly: 

St. Joseph’s Home. 

Magnolia. 

Boonton: 

New Jersey Firemen’s Home. 

Burlington: 

Home for Aged Women. 

Union St. 

Masonic Home and Orphanage. 


Supervised or conducted 
by— 


Camden: 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

West and Washington Sts. 

Cedar Grove: 

Montclair Fresh Air and Convalescent Home. 
Ridge Road. 

Collin gswood: 

Methodist Home for the Aged. 

Elizabeth: 

Home for Aged Women. 

1073 East Jersey St. 

Hackensack: 

Old Ladies’ Home of Bergen County. 

Passaic St. and Clarenden Place. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

20 State St. 

Hoboken: 

Widows’ Home. 

815 Bloomfield St. 

1 Not opened until 1911 

2 Average of maximum 
8 Not reported. 


Franciscan Sisters of Charity 

Independent Order of Odd 
Fellows. 


Private corporation. 

Independent Order of Odd 
Fellows. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Trustees of Mary Gale En¬ 
dowment. 

Sisters of Mercy. 

Masonic Grand Lodge of 
New Hampshire. 

Sisters of Mercy. 

Women’s Aid and Relief So¬ 
ciety. 

Trustees of John M. Hunt 
Endowment. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

State of New Hampshire.... 


National Florence Critten¬ 
ton Mission. 

Salvation Army. 

Sisters of St. Francis. 

State of New Jersey. 

Private corporation... 

Masonic Grand Lodge of 
New Jersey. 

Salvation Army. 

Private corporation. 

Methodist Episcopal Church. 
Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Salvation Army. 

Private corporation (Episco¬ 
pal). 

and minimum amounts. 


Class of inmates received. 


Aged men and women. 


Odd Fellows, their families, 
and Rebekahs. 


Impoverished aged persons... 

Odd Fellows and their fami¬ 
lies. 

Impoverished aged persons... 

Invalids and convalescents... 

Homeless aged men and 
women. 

Aged and destitute women... 

Aged men. 

Masons and their families.... 

Aged women. 

Aged and infirm women. 


Aged couples and men. 

Homeless aged women. 

Impoverished aged women... 
Impoverished aged women... 

Aged men and women. 

Veterans. 


Fallen women and their in¬ 
fants. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 


Indigent aged persons. 


Aged volunteer firemen. 

Aged women. 

Masons and their families 

Homeless unemployed men.. 

Fresh air children, their 
mothers, and convalescents. 

Aged members of the church. 

Aged women. 


Aged women and couples 
Homeless unemployed men.. 

Aged widows. 


T3 

© 

PI 

a 

o 


1905 

1911 

1876 

1886 

1883 

1874 

1910 

18S9 

1908 

18S3 

1879 

1874 

1895 

1876 

1903 

1877 

1904 

1890 


1906 

1910 

1887 

1900 

jS9S 

1898 

1903 

1902 

1890 

1871 

1896 

1908 

1872 


© 

o 

9 

a 

u 

a 

© 


a 

a 

o 

a 

<s 


$300 


200 


300 

200 


100 

100 

200 

( 5 ) 

500 


200 


150 

200 

300 


© 

P. 

■o 


a 

a 

o 

a 


$5.00 


2 4.00 


2 4.25 


1.50 

( 4 ) 


(V 


2.50 No 


"3 

© 


© 

8 


© 

a 

•a 

© 


o 

o 


Yes. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

( 3 ) 

No. 

Yes. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No 

(*) 

Yes. 


No. 

( 6 ) 

No. 

Yes. 

No. 

No. 

( 6 ) 

No. 

( 3 ) 

No. 

No. 

( e ) 


VI i- 

Sg 

a 


OS' 

Ph 


9 

7 

6 

4 

4 

3 

2 

6 

13 

3 

4 

1 

5 

2 

29 


6 

3 

25 

8 

4 

4 

6 

4 

5 


INMATES RECEIVED 
DURING YEAR. 


o 

E-i 


13 


6 

11 

3 

19 


( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


4 
2 

5 
4 

6 

2 

1 

1 

2 

25 

139 

62 

20 

6 


15 

193 

200 

2 

2 

4 

38 


© 

73 

a 


10 


( 3 ) 


25 


62 

6 

6 


11 

193 

125 


38 


© 

a 

© 


3 

19 


( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


139 


14 


75 

2 

2 


4 According to ability to pay. 
8 All property owned. 

8 No rule against admission. 


























































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


215 


\ 

OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


INMATES PRESENT AT CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Adults. 

Children. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Permanently 

dependent. 

Temporarily 

dependent. 

Wayward or 
delinquent. 

Total. 

0 

■a 

Female.' 

V 

Orphan or de¬ 

pendent. 

Received with 

parent. 

Delinquent. 

39 

20 

19 

39 



















\ 


40 


40 

40 









22 

15 

7 

22 









33 

3 

30 

33 









10 


10 

10 









13 

5 

8 

13 








18 


18 

18 






* 



11 

11 


11 









14 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

14 









28 

28 

28 









35 


35 

35 









15 

15 


15 









17 


17 

17 









2 


2 

2 









12 


12 

12 









7 

1 

6 

7 









94 

94 


94 









6 

6 

2 

4 

4 

3 

1 

1 

3 


19 

19 



19 








54 

21 

33 

54 








39 

32 

32 









14 

14 

14 









52 

38 

14 

52 



23 

10 

13 

23 



23 

23 

23 








3 

3 


3 


13 

7 

6 

13 



23 

9 

21 

23 









24 


24 

24 









90 


20 

20 









11 

11 

11 








6 

6 

6 









"T" 








Total. 


$5,772 


11,332 

7,130 

9,507 

3,738 

9,404 

2,000 

( 3 ) 

6,000 

( 3 ) 

37,052 

( 3 ) 

3,596 
2,540 
1,800 
2,714 
7 23,025 

2,960 

1,109 

4,752 

13,186 
994 
30,188 

11,935 

• 

2,030 

27, 778 
9, 431 

4,359 
5,582 

1,607 


RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 


/ Derived from— 


Appro¬ 

pri¬ 

ations. 


Dona¬ 

tions. 


$732 


Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 


'$5,000 


859 
3,47# 
38 
215 
3,414 


756 

1,923 

5,875 


( 3 ) 


( 3 ) 


275 


( 3 ) 


$510 


( 3 ) 

2,050 

( 3 ) 


1,974 
1,300 
600 
1,710 


151 


7 23,025 


500 


1,477 


130 


3,222 


599 


12,000 

400 


172 

24,257 


2,030 

27,478 
1,164 

1,290 


300 


( 9 ) 


480 



V 

PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 









L. 
0 

rO 




For 


Land, 


g 



For 

perma- 


build- 

In- 

c 


Total. 

running 

nent 

Total. 

mgs, 

vested 

a 

Other 


ex- 

im- 


and 

funds. 


sources 


penses. 

prove- 


equip- 


D 




ments. 


ment. 










i 









1 

$40 

$5,540 

$3,840 

$1,700 

$35,000 

$30,000 

$5,000 

13 



\ 





14 

10,473 

9,586 

8,474 

1,112 

209,234 

60,000 

149,234 

1 

3,655 

7,132 

7,132 


100,000 

50,000 

50,000 

2 

8,713 

9,507 

6,526 

2,981 

229,933 

25,000 

204,933 

3 

1,600 

3,006 

2,856 

150 

45,000 

15,000 

30,000 

4 

115 

1,819 

1,819 


54,000 

50,000 

4,000 

5 

2,000 

2,000 

2,000 


( 3 ) 

50,000 

( 3 ) 

6 

( s ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( s ) 

7 

5,725 

6,000 

6,000 


35,600 

28,000 

7,600 

8 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


9 

34, 492 

10,516 

8,917 

1,599 

230,000 

30,000 

200,000 

10 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

11 

1,622 

3,098 

3,098 


44,574 

5,000 

39,574 

12 

1,240 

2,540 

740 

1,800 

13,500 

5,000 

8,500 

13 

1,200 

1,800 

1,800 


47,000 

5,000 

42,000 

14 

853 

2,191 

2,191 


31, 670 

15,000 

16,670 

15 


23,020 

23,020 


50,000 

50,000 


16 

853 

9,500 

2,300 

7,200 

5,000 

5,000 


1 

1,109 

4,047 

4,047 


14,115 

14,115 


2 

931 

4, 635 

4,635 

% 


( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

(=) 

3 

1,186 

12,567 

9,634 

2,933 

S3,512 

75,000 

8,512 

4 

422 

1,713 

1,713 


9,100 

8,000 

1,100 

5 

5,931 

35,124 

30,041 

5,083 

211,102 

124,000 

87,102 

6 

11,935 

13,371 

13,371 


8 718 

8 718 


7 

3,932 

2,132 

1,800 

16,600 

16,600 


8 


28,537 

5,362 

23,175 

40,000 

40,000 


9 

8,267 

5,709 

4,456 

1,253 

17,052 

10,600 

6,452 

10 

10 3,069 

3,292 

2,376 

916 

26,000 

15,000 

11,000 

11 

5,582 

5,264 

5,264 


8 533 

8 533 


12 

1,127 

1,378 

1,378 


33,700 

8,000 

25,700 

13 


7 Includes $8,025 from U. S. Government. 9 Included in “other sources.” 

8 Equipment. 10 Includes “care of inmates.” 




















































































































































































Institution number. 


216 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table III.—HOMES FOR THE CARE OF ADULTS 


NA1IE AND LOCATION. 


Supervised or conducted 
by- 


Class of inmates received. 


NEW JERSEY—Continued. 


14 

15 

16 

17 

18 


Irvington: 

Bethany Home for the Aged. 

Park and Springfield Aves. 
Colored Aged Home and Orphanage. 
Park and Stuyvesant Aves. 
Jersey City: 

German Pioneer Home. 

Garfield Ave. and Dwight St. 

Home for Aged Women. 

657 Bergen Ave. 

Home for Girls. 

41 Belmont Ave. 


19 

20 
21 

22 

23 

24 


Newman Industrial Home and Mission. 
421 Johnson Ave. 

St. Katherine’s Home. 

32 Reservoir Ave. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

Fourteenth and Erie Sts. 

Kearney: 

Neiv Jersey Home for Disabled Soldiers 
Belgrove Drive. 

Lawrenceville: 

Morris Hall—Home for Aged. 

Longport: 

Bide-A-Wee Home for Incurables. 


25 

26 

27 

28 

29 

30 

31 

32 

33 

34 

35 

36 

37 

38 

39 

40 

41 

42 

43 

44 

45 

46 

47 

48 


Metuchen: 

Metuchen Home.. 

Maple Ave. 

Morristown: 

Old Ladies’ Home.. 

3 Mount Kemble Ave. 

New Brunswick: 

Francis E. Parker Memorial Home.. 

Easton Ave. 

Newark: 

Baptist Home for the Aged.. 

285 Roseville Ave. 

Christian Refuge. 

109 Mechanic St. 

Daughters of Israel Home for the Aged_ 

54 Stirling St. 

Florence Crit'tenton Home. 

305 Elizabeth Ave. 

French Industrial Home for Men. 

51 Plane St. 

Home for Incurables and Hospital. 

102 Court St. 

Home for the Aged. 

Warren and South Eighth Sts. 

Home for Respectable Aged Women. 

225 Mount Pleasant Ave. 

House of the Good Shepherd. 

Thirteenth Ave. and South Eighth St. 

Job Haines Home for Aged People. 

Watsessing and Bloomfield Aves. 

Newark Rescue Home. 

15 Spring St. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

303 New Jersey Railroad Ave. 

Newton: 

Merriman Home. 

1319 Walnut St., Philadelphia (office). 

Orange: 

Fair Haven Rescue Home. 

21 Commerce St. 

House of the Good Shepherd. 

88 Henry St. 

Paterson: 

Florence Crittenton Home. 

700 East Eighteenth St. 

Holland Home for the Aged. 

110 Iowa Ave. 

Home for the Aged. 

70 Dey St. 

Old Ladies’ Home. 

271 Totowa Ave. 

St. Dominic’s Home. 

276 Atlantic St. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

42 Mill St. 


Private corporation. 

Private association. 

German Pioneer Verein. 

Private corporation. 

Woman’s Christian Temper¬ 
ance Union. 

Private corporation. 

Protestant Episcopal Church 
Salvation Army. 

State of New Jersey. 

Sisters of St. Francis. 

New Jersey Shut-In Society. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation (Bap¬ 
tist). 

Private corporation. 

Private organization. 

National Florence Critten¬ 
ton Mission. 

Private corporation. 

Private organization. 

Little Sisters of the Poor.... 

Private corporation (Prot¬ 
estant churches). 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Salvation Army. 

Board of Ministerial Relief 
(Presbyterian). 

Woman’s Christian Temper¬ 
ance Union. 

Private corporation (Epis¬ 
copal). 

National Florence Critten¬ 
ton Mission. 

Private corporation. 

Little Sisters of the Poor.... 

Private corporation. 

Private organization. 

Salvation Army. 


Aged men and women. 

Aged men and women. 

Aged German Americans.... 

Homeless aged women. 

Homeless, dependent, or 
erring women and their 
children. 

Homeless men and boys. 

Fallen girls and their infants. 
Homeless unemployed men.. 

Veterans. 

Aged men and women. 

Noninfectious and noncon- 
tagious incurables. 

Homeless aged persons. 

Aged women. 

Incurables and convalescents. 

Aged members of the church. 

Fallen women and wayward 
girls. 

Aged Hebrews. 

Fallen girls and their infants. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 

Incurable women. 

Needy aged persons. 

Aged women. 

Fallen women and unpro¬ 
tected girls. 

Dependent aged persons. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 
Homeless unemployed men.. 

Presbyterian ministers, their) 
families, and female mis¬ 
sionaries. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 
Impoverished, aged persons... 

Fallen girls and women. 

Needy aged persons. 

Destitute aged persons. 

Impoverished aged women... 

Aged women and dependent 
children. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 


Year founded. 

Amount of entrance fee asked. 

Amount asked per week. 

Colored persons received. 

Paid employees at close of 

year. 

INMAT 

DUR 

”c3 

o 

Eh 

ES RECE 
ING YEJ 

® 

a 

IVED 

IR. 

a 

<D 

1901 

0) 


No. 

5 

14 

6 

/ 

8 

1893 

2 $175 


Yes. 

2 

1 


1 

1888 


No. 

4 

8 

3 

5 

1868 

300 


No. 

7 

6 


6 

1901 


Yes. 

1 

85 


85 

1887 



Yes. 

29 

1,460 

1,460 


1889 

15 

<>$10.00 

No. 

1 

21 

6 

15 

1898 



(«) 

15 

873 

873 


1865 



Yes. 

22 

196 

196 


1905 


5.00 

No. 

12 

3 

1 

2 

1909 


2 2.13 

( 3 ) 

13 

84 

55 

29 

18S8 


2 4. 75 

No. 

4 

6 


6 

1885 


( 8 ) 

No. 

2 

3 


3 

1907 


2 6.63 

No. 

10 

52 

18 

34 

1891 

200 


No. 

8 

5 

1 

4 

1891 



Yes. 

2 

73 


73 

1907 



No. 

4 

18 

8 

10 

1902 



No. 

3 

101 


101 

1S96 



No. 

34 

19,907 

19,907 


1881 


2 7.00 

No. 

11 

32 


32 

1878 



Yes. 


54 

30 

24 

1867 

300 


No. 

10 

7 


7 

1874 



No. 

3 

103 


103 

1897 

300 


No. 

7 

9 

1 

8 

1897 


2.00 

Yes. 

31 

30,000 

30,000 


1899 



(«) 

18 

283 

283 


1876 



No. 

8 

1 


1 

1887 



No. 

9 

135 

135 


1890 


5.00 

No. 

10 

( 3 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 3 ) 

1899 


id 2.00 

No. 

2 

48 

14 

34 

1895 

( ll ) 


No. 

3 

5 

4 

1 

1901 



Yes. 


50 

29 

21 

1875 

200 


No. 

6 

1 


1 

1893 

300 


No. 


10 


10 

1901 



(«) 

7 

216 

215 










1 Separate room, $1,000; roommate, $500. 

2 Average of maximum and minimum amounts. 
8 Not reported. 


4 Includes woodyard. 

8 Per month; no weekly charge. 
* No rule against admission. 





































































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


217 


OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 



INMATES PRESENT 

AT CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Adults. 

Children. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Permanently 

dependent. 

Temporarily 

dependent. 

Wayward or 
delinquent. 

Total. 

6 

*03 

a 

Female. 

Orphan or de¬ 

pendent. 

Received with 

parent. 

Delinquent. 

81 

29 

52 

81 









14 

5 

9 

14 









39 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

39 









30 

30 

30 









62 


62 

20 

20 

22 

8 

6 

2 

8 



76 

76 



76 







12 


12 



12 

9 

6 

3 

9 



75 

75 



75 







556 

556 


556 









68 

16 

52 

68 









36 

17 

19 

36 



6 

5 

i 

6 



12 


12 

1 

11 






17 


17 

17 









23 

8 

15 

23 



1 


i 

1 



30 

3 

27 

30 







15 


15 



15 

9 

4 

5 


9 


23 

7 

16 

23 








(S) 


( 3 ) 



( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 > 


( 3 ) 


60 

60 


60 



41 


41 

41 









230 

105 

125 

230 









54 


54 

54 









141 


141 

3 

51 

87 

148 


148 

39 

30 

79 

44 

8 

36 

44 









119 

119 



119 








64 

64 



64 








20 

4 

16 

20 









22 

22 



22 








26 

5 

21 

26 









13 


13 

3 

5 

5 

7 

7 


7 



25 

13 

12 

25 









150 

76 

74 

150 









21 


21 

21 









13 


13 

13 



4 


4 

4 



19 

19 



19 





















RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 


Total. 


$12,921 
3,818 

12,058 
6,674 
715 

i 15,600 
2,862 
44,824 

7 87,703 

14, 428 
4,861 

3,304 

2,136 

5,439 

8,063 
3,514 
3,500 
2,099 
23,545 
17,627 
12,074 
8,900 
30,164 
12,249 
412,500 
35,083 

2,481 

< 11,250 
8,329 

1,926 

2,400 

13,877 

4,768 

135 

10,126 


Derived from— 


Appro¬ 

pri¬ 

ations. 


7 $87,703 


Dona¬ 

tions. 


$1,879 

1,668 

8,178 

1,756 

675 

600 
2,291 


6,728 
2,598 


649 

744 


4,5 


3,500 
1,769 
6,685 
544 
( 3 ) 
1,400 
300 
3,000 


( 3 ) 

1,149 

2,400 

( 3 ) 
1,759 
25 


Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 


$7,140 


551 


237 


5,287 

2,251 

3,086 


2,775 


330 

704 

8,589 


2,800 


Other 

sources, 


$3,902 

2,150 

3,329 

4,918 

40 

<15,000 
334 
44,824 


2,413 

12 

218 

1,487 

1,920 

3,094 

3,514 


( 3 ) 


75 


16,156 
8,494 
( 3 ) 
7,500 
29,864 
9,249 
<9,700 
35,083 

2,481 

< 11,250 

( 3 ) 

777 


( 3 ) 
3,009 
35 

10,126 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 


Total. 


$13,154 
2,525 

6,061 

7,908 

789 

17,000 
3,176 
46,897 

87,703 

13,797 
10. 401 

3,086 

1,981 

6,035 

36,425 
3,158 
5,500 
3,043 
23,553 
14,118 
11,098 
12,500 
30,159 
11,600 
12,500 
32,598 

7,272 

11,011 

( 3 ) 

1,913 

4,000 

22,648 

4,990 

600 

9,557 


For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 


$12,410 
2,141 

6,061 

6,291 

789 

17,000 
2,476 
46,897 

87,703 

13, 797 
9,997 

3,086 

1,981 

6,035 

6,425 
3,158 
3,300 
1,976 
23,053 
12,611 
11,098 
12,500 
24,000 
10,000 
12, .500 
32,598 

6,103 

11,011 

( 3 ) 

1,913 
3,200 
( 3 ) 
4,990 
400 
9,557 


For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 


1,617 


700 


404 


30,000 


1,169 


( 3 ) 


800 


( 3 ) 


200 


VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

$57,183 

$50,348 

$6,835 

14 

7,000 

7,000 


15 

100,795 

54,045 

46,750 

16 

66,950 

35,000 

31,950 

17 




18 

22,000 

22,000 


19 

20,340 

16,000 

4,340 

20 

66,092 

66,092 


21 

281,900 

281,900 


22 

125,000 

125,000 


23 

41,000 

41,000 


24 

6,000 

6,000 


25 

73,100 

40,000 

33,100 

26 

88,450 

52,000 

36,450 

27 

63,500 

55,000 

8,500 

28 

24,000 

24,000 


29 

15,000 

15,000 


30 

12,000 

12,000 


31 

30,584 

28,635 

1,949 

32 

49,000 

35,000 

14,000 

33 

300,338 

300,338 


34 

190,000 

40,000 

150,000 

35 

200,000 

200,000 


36 

105,000 

40,000 

65,000 

37 

»2,500 

» 2,500 


38 

23,598 

23,598 


39 

99,000 

30,000 

69,000 

40 

4,250 

4,250 


41 

8,575 

( 8 ) 

( 3 ) 

42 

16,000 

16,000 


43 

10,000 

10,000 


44 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

45 

87,247 

32,000 

55,247 

46 

10,000 

10,000 


47 

8 4,004 

9 4,004 


48 


7 Includes $35,656 from U. S. Government. 

8 Inmates must have income of at least $10 per month to buy food, 

9 Equipment. 


For children boarded, 
u According to ability to pay 

































































































































































































































Institution number. 


218 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table III.—HOMES FOR THE CARE OF ADULTS 


49 

50 

51 

52 

53 

54 

55 

56 

57 

58 

59 


2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

_ 8 

9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 
21 
22 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


NEW JERSEY—Continued. 
Plainfield: 

St. Joseph’s Home. 

39 Manning Ave. (North Plainfield). 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

434 East Fourth St. 

Ridgewood: 

House of Divine Providence. 

Skillman: 

New Jersey State Village for Epileptics.. 
Tenafly: 

Mary Fisher Home of New Jersey. 

Jay St. 

Trenton: 

Florence Crittenton Home. 

West State St. 

Odd Fellows’ Home. 


Salvation Army Industrial Home... 

East Carroll St. ✓ 

Widows’ and Single Women’s Home 
Spring St. 

Vineland: 

New Jersev Home for Disabled Soldiers, 
Sailors, Marines, and their Wives. 

West Hoboken: 

Fritz Reuter Altenheim.. 

Hudson Boulevard. 

NEW MEXICO. 

Roswell. 

Odd Fellows’ Home 8 .. 


Supervised or conducted 
by- 


NEW YORK. 

Albany: 

Albany Guardian Society and Home for the 
Friendless. 

553 Clinton Ave. 

Home for Aged Men.. 

Home for the Aged. 

391 Central Ave. 

Home for Respectable Women. 

886 Madison Ave. 

House of Shelter. 

52 Howard St. 

House of the Good Shepherd. 

562 Central Ave. 

Open Door Mission and Deaconess Home.. 

3 Columbia Place. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

60 Dallius St. 

Amityvtlle, L. I.: 

Brunswick Home. 

Broadway. 

St. Catharine’s Infirmary. 

Amsterdam: 

Sarah Jane Sanford Home for Elderly 
Women. 

69 Spring St. 

Auburn: 

Auburn Home for the Friendless.. 

46 Grant Ave. 

Barnard: 

St. Ann’s Home for the Aged. 

Boulevard. 

Batii: 

New York State Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Home. 
Binghamton. 

Home for Aged Women. 

58 Fairview Ave. 

House of Good Shepherd. 

74 Conklin Ave. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

6 State St. 

The Rufuge. 

64 Fairview Ave. 

Brooklyn. 11 
Buffalo: 

Asylum of Our Lady of Refuge. 

485 Best St. 

Church Charity Foundation Church Home.. 
835 Front Ave. 

Erie County Lodging House. 

29 Franklin St. 

German Deaconess Home and Hospital 
(Home Department). 

218 Kingsley St. 


Sisters of Mercy. 
Salvation Army. 


Sisters of Charity... 
State of New Jersey. 
Private corporation. 


National Florence Critten¬ 
ton Mission. 

Independent Order of Odd 
Fellows. 

Salvation Army.. 


Private association. 


State of New Jersey. 


Private association. 


Independent Order of Odd 
Fellows. 


Private corporation. 


Private corporation. 

Little Sisters of the Poor.... 

Dominican Sisters. 

Private corporation. 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd 


Woman’s Home Missionary 
Society, M. E. Church. 
Salvation Army. 


Private corporation_ 

Sisters of St. Dominic. 
Private corporation... 


Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

State of New York.. 
Private corporation. 


Private corporation (Episco¬ 
pal). 

Salvation Army. 


Private corporation. 


Sisters of Charity of Refuge . 
Protestant Episcopal Church 

County of Erie. 

German Protestant churches 


Class of inmates received. 


Working girls. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 

Homeless aged incurables L.. 

Epileptics. 

Dependent brain workers.... 

Homeless or fallen women.... 

Odd Fellows, their wives and 
widows. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 
Aged gentlewomen. 

Veterans and their wives. 

Aged Germans. 

Odd Fellows and their fam¬ 
ilies. 

Friendless women. 

Indigent aged men. 

Needy aged persons. 

Needy women and working 
girl's. 

Fallen women and their in¬ 
fants. 

Fallen women and their in¬ 
fants, and delinquent chil¬ 
dren. 

Unemployed women. 

Homeless unmployed men... 

All classes of incurables, ex¬ 
cept insane. 

Aged persons and incurables. 
Aged women. 

Impoverished aged women... 

> 

Deserving aged persons. 

Civil War veterans. 

Impoverished aged women... 
Aged Episcopalian women... 
Homeless unemployed men... 
Fallen girls and their infants. 


Inebriate or fallen women 
and wayward girls. 

Aged persons and dependent 
children. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 


Aged Germans. 


•a 

r a 


1897 

1908 

% 

1891 

1898 

1899 

1895 

1908 

1900 

1854 

1898 

1898 

1911 

1851 

1878 

1871 

1880 

1868 

1884 

1899 
1904 

1887 

1893 

1897 

1864 

1898 

1878 

1893 

1870 

1904 

1893 

1855 
1858 
1908 
1895 


S3 

M 


a 


o 

a 

-«! 


( 5 ) 


$500 

25 


150 


300 


( 9 ) 


300 


300 

300 


( 10 ) 


300 


500 


44 

o 

Cu 

it 

<3 

a 

S3 

<U 

44 


fl 

a 

o 

a 

<5 


i $4.75 


(*) 


5.00 


( 6 ) 


1 17.50 
5.00 


3.00 


3.00 


18 1.80 


■a 

<D 

> 

‘3 

o 


ft 

S3 

H 

_o 

73 

O 


No. 

( 2 ) 

No. 

Yes. 

No. 

Yes. 

No. 

( 2 ) 

No. 

Yes. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

Yes. 

No. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

No. 

( 2 ) 

Yes. 

Yes. 

( 6 ) 

No. 

No. 

Yes. 

No. 

No. 

( 2 ) 

( 6 ) 

Yes. 

No. 

Yes. 

No. 


1 Average of maximum and minimum amounts. 

2 No rule against admission. 

3 Equipment. 

4 Exclusive of tubercular, epileptic, and mental cases. 


&& 

ft 


6 

14 

100 

7 

3 

9 

8 
5 

38 

5 


55 

4 

5 

7 

15 

438 

5 

3 

4 
2 

6 
25 

5 

11 


INMATES RECEIVED 
DURING YEAR. 


8 According to ability to pay. 

6 Not reported. 

7 Includes $8,181 from U. S. Government. 


o 

Pi 


65 

41 

94 

54 

22 

47 

19 

161 

5 

58 

5 


5 

32 

( 6 ) 

33 
50 

400 

188 

79 

41 

2 

9 

19 

1,099 

1 


47 

26 

128 

90 

9,722 

1 


<s 

7s 

a 


41 

( 6 ) 

37 

5 

( 6 ) 

11 

161 


22 


5 

10 


188 

44 

17 


3 

1,099 


47 

6 

1 

32 

9,722 


.2 

Sj 

s 


65 


( 6 ) 


17 

17 


( 6 ) 


5 

36 

5 


22 

( 6 ) 

29 

50 

400 


35 

24 

2 

9 

16 


20 

127 

58 















































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


219 


OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 



INMATES PRESENT AT CLOSE OF 

YEAR. 


RECEIPTS 

DURING 

YEAR. 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Adults. 

Children. 

Total. 

Derived from— 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

• 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

Total. 

© 

*03 

© 

’cS 

a 

© 

>> . 
9 a 

§3 

5 a 

2 © 
a a 

tx © 

© -o 
P 

£ 

a® 
O G 
&© 
G © 

©-o 

T3 § 

If 

c? a> 

is* 

*C3 

4-3 

O 

© 

*03 

© 

*o3 

5 

© 

pH 

& 

T3 . 

O C3 

9^ 

fG © 

S-i 

o 

Gl 

44> 

■sg 

> h 

g ft 
© 

4-j 

G 

© 

G 

cr 

a 

'© 

A 

Appro¬ 

pri¬ 

ations. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources. 

12 


12 


12 








$2,680 


$228 

$1,641 

$811 

$2,317 

$2,317 


$7,900 

$7,900 


49 

16 

16 



16 








7,273 



7,273 

6,455 

6,455 


8 1,639 

3 1,639 


50 

210 

(«) 

( 6 ) 

210 



20 


20 

20 



(«) 


( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

(8) 

66,508 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 


51 

246 

134 

112 

246 



87 

47 

40 

87 



126,481 

$118,324 

3,625 

4,532 

171,123 

127,362 

$43,761 

730,716 

728,716 

$2,000 

52 

28 

5 

23 


28 








8,998 

3,365 

5,633 

8,191 

7,832 

359 

10,441 

9,500 

941 

53 

5 


5 

5 









2,695 


1,879 

566 

250 

2,600 

2,600 


20,000 

20,000 


54 

46 

31 

15 

46 









15,835 


15,835 



10,275 

10,275 


62,536 

60,643 

1,893 

55 

18 

18 



18 








8,543 



8,543 

9,114 

8,574 

540 

3 1,633 

8 1,633 

56 

20 


20 

20 









(8) 


( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

(«) 

(«) 

(«) 

(«) 

( 6 ) 

57 

293 

101 

192 

293 









7 75,481 

^ 74,484 

997 

73,072 

62,218 

10,854 

157,803 

157, S03 

58 

55 

22 

33 

55 









7,400 

5,000 


2,400 

6,316 

6,316 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

50,000 

59 
















1 

36 


36 

36 









9,562 


3,199 


6,363 

8,862 

8,127 

735 

171,261 

15,000 

156,261 

1 

39 

39 


39 









10,835 


1,947 

1,750 

7,138 

10,835 

8, S37 

1,998 

176,754 

30,000 

146,754 

2 

IfiO 

78 

8 8 9 

160 









6*232 


6,232 


5,628 

5,628 

95,000 

95,000 

3 

23 

23 

23 









(6) 


( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

(«) 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

4 

16 


16 



16 

5 

2 

3 

5 



4,169 

1,598 

465 

119 

1,987 

3,632 

3,632 

74,700 

43,000 

31,700 

5 

52 


52 



52 

42 


42 


2 

40 

33,354 

6,188 

15,021 


12,145 

24,000 

24,000 


200,000 

200,000 


6 

3 


3 


3 







2,479 

2,479 


2,342 

2,342 


9,300 

8,000 

1,300 

7 

29 

29 



29 








10,931 



10,931 

10,187 

10,187 


12,704 

12,704 

8 

123 

79 

44 

] IQ 

1 

3 

41 

23 

18 

29 

1 

11 

53,626 




531 

46,808 

44,208 

2,600 

100,000 

100,000 


9 


24 

52 

76 




14,450 

7,293 

3,949 

3,208 


15,798 

14,787 

1,011 

38,080 

38,080 


10 

23 

23 

23 









3,764 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

3,469 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

(«) 

80,000 

( 6 ) 

11 

35 


35 

35 









8,669 

375 

4,929 

3,365 

7,956 

7,461 

495 

49,075 

20,500 

28,575 

12 

145 

25 

120 

145 









24,690 

5,034 

3,536 

8,966 

7,154 

19,313 

16,563 

2,750 

150,000 

150,000 


13 

1 853 

1 853 

1 853 









319,021 

319,021 

319,021 

287,453 

31,568 

672,525 

672,525 


14 

14 


14 

14 









3,097 

323 

1,506 

1,268 

2,876 

2,812 

64 

36,000 

12,000 

24,000 

15 

12 


12 

12 









1,332 


183 


1,149 

1,468 

1,395 

73 

18,500 

10,000 

8,500 

16 

14 

14 

14 








6,493 




6,493 

6,752 

6,752 


10,684 

10,684 


17 

6 

5 


6 

2 

1 

1 

2 



1,627 


807 

733 

87 

1,460 

1,460 


11,000 

10,000 

1,000 

18 

56 


56 

17 

5 

34 

37 


37 

18 


19 

40,962 

3,018 

3,233 

934 

33,777 

40,813 

24,010 

16,803 

175,000 

175,000 


19 

37 

1 

36 

37 



79 

50 

29 

79 



29,626 

1,921 

5,288 

6,287 

16,130 

26,363 

23,324 

3,039 

417,100 

217,060 

200,040 

20 

fifi 


68 








17,341 

17,341 




17,341 

17,341 





21 

50 

14 

36 

50 








(13) 

(13) 

(13) 

(») 

(») 

(13) 

(13) 


(13) 

(!3) 

(13) 

22 




















8 Not opened until 1911. 

9 For residents, $250; nonresidents, $500. 
i® Residents $25; nonresidents, $50. 


u See New York City, 
i® For chddren. 

i® Included in report for German Deaconess Home and Hospital (Hospital Department), 













































































































































































































220 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table III.—HOMES FOR THE CARE OF ADULTS 


Institution number. 

NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised or conducted 
by— 

23 

NEW YORK—Continued. 

Buffalo—C ontinued. 

Home for the Friendless. 

Private corporation. 

24 

1500 Main St. 

Homestead Lodging House. 

Christian Homestead Asso- 


80 Lloyd St. 

ciation. 

25 

Ingleside Home. 

Private corporation. 

26 

~ 70 Harvard Place. 

King’s Daughters’ Home. 

King’s Daughters. 

27 

134 Mariner St. 

Lutheran Qhurch Home for the Aged and 

Private corporation (Luth- 


Infirm. 

eran). 

28 

217 East Delevan Ave. 

Salvation Army Rescue Home. 

Salvation Army. 

29 

69 Cottage St. 

St. Elizabeth’s Home. 

Catholic Aid Society. 

30 

73 Pine St. 

St. Francis Asylum. 

Sisters of Third Order of St. 


337 Pine St. 

Francis. 

31 

Salvation Armv Industrial Home.. 

Salvation Army. 

32 

97 Seneca St. 

Canandaigua: 

Clark Manor House. 

Private corporation. 

33 

318 Fort Hill Ave. 

Catskill: 

Home for Aged Women in Greene County... 

Private corporation. 

34 

Cohoes: 

Home for Aged Women. 

Private corporation. 

35 

100 Vliet St. 

East Aurora: 

Havens Home for the Aged. 

National Benevolent Associ- 


229 Center St. 

ation of Christian Church. 

36 

Eastview: 

Loeb Convalescent Home. 

Private corporation. 

37 

356 Second Ave., N. Y. (office). 
Ebene.ter: 

Ebenezer Altenheim. 

Elmira: 

Helen L. Bullock Industrial School. 

The Evangelical Association. 

38 

Private corporation. 

39 

955 College Ave. 

Home for the Aged. 

Private corporation. 

40 

Grand Central Ave. 

Fairport: 

Baptist Home of Monroe County. 

Private corporation (Bap- 

41 

Forks: 

German Evangelical Church Home. 

tist). 

German Evangelical 

42 

Fredonia: 

Home for Aged Women. 

churches. 

Woman’s Christian Associa- 


134 Temple St. 

tion. 

43 

Gardenville: 

St. Francis Home. 

Sisters of Third Order of St. 

44 

Geneva: 

Chinch Home. 

Francis. 

Trinity Church (Episcopal). 

45 

46 

82 Pulteney St. 

Gerry: 

Gerry Homes (Home Department). 

Glens Falls: 

Glens Falls Home. 

Free Methodist Church. 

Private corporation. 

47 

106 Warren St. 

Hawthorne: 

Rosary Hill Home. 

Sisters of St. Dominic. 

48 

Homer: 

Cortland County Home for Aged Women.... 

Private corporation. 

49 

Main St. 

Hudson: 

Home for the Aged. 

Private corporation. 

50 

Volunteer Firemen’s Home. 

Firemen’s Association of the 


Howard Ave. 

State of New York. 

61 

Ithaca: 

The Home. 

Ladies Union Benevolent 


514 South Aurora St. 

Society. 


Johnstown: 


52 

53 

Willing Helpers’ Home for Women. 

Madison Ave. 

King’s Park, L. I.: 

Home for Aged Women. 

Private corporation. 

Society of St. Johnland. 

54 

St. John’s Inn. 

Society of St. Johnland. 

55 

Sunset Cottage. 

Society of St. Johnland. 

Lakemont: 


56 

Aged Christian Ministers’ Home. 

American Christian Conven- 


Main St. 

tion. 


Class of inmates received. 

<D 

^3 

a 

o 

a 

§ 

<v 

Amount of entrance fee asked. 

Amount asked per week. 

Colored persons received. 

Paid employees at close of 

year. 

INMAT 

DUB 

73 

o 

EH 

ES RECI 
.ING YE 

© 

SIVED 

AR. 

© 

73 

a 

© 

Ph 

Homeless aged women . 

1868 

$250 

i $3.50 

Yes. 

13 

4 


4 


1891 

7 1.00 

No. 

9 

76,928 

76,928 


less men. 







1869 

( 3 ) 


Yes. 

3 

118 


118 

girls and their infants. 







Convalescent and unem- 

1896 


3.85 

Yes. 

2 

272 


272 

ployed working girls. 








Aged members of the church. 

1896 

(«) 


No. 

4 

7 

2 

5 

Fallen women and their chil- 

1900 



Yes. 

9 

231 


231 

dren. 










1906 



Yes. 

1 

229 


229 

girls. 








Homeless men and women_ 

1862 



No. 

10 

94 

52 

42 

Homeless unemployed men 

1904 



( 8 ) 

5 

290 

290 


Aged men and women.. 

1900 

250 


No. 

8 

2 


2 

Indigent aged women. 

1908 

300 


No. 

2 

4 


4 

Aged Protestant women. 

1S94 

300 


( 5 ) 

1 

1 


1 

Destitute aged persons. 

1902 

100 


No. 

5 

4 


4 

Convalescents. 

1904 


( 9 ) 

Yes. 

24 

1,425 

631 

794 

Aged and infirm persons. 

1897 

300 

No. 

4 

4 

2 

2 

Wayward girls and depend- 

1890 


7 1.50 

No. 

5 

10 


10 

ent children. 









Aged men and women. 

1872 

(10) 


No. 

7 

6 


6 

Aged members of the church. 

1904 

300 


No. 

5 

10 

(*) 


Aged men and women. 

1877 


(«) 

No. 

7 

20 

7 

13 

Dependent gentlewomen. 

1893 

400 

No. 

6 

4 


4 

Homeless aged persons. 

1902 



No. 

3 

81 

51 

30 

Aged women. 

1880 


2.00 

No. 

4 




Homeless aged persons. 

1886 

500 


Yes. 

6 

5 

3 

2 

Dependent aged women;. 

1899 

200 


No. 

5 

1 


1 

Destitute persons with incur- 

1901 



Yes. 

4 

100 

40 

60 

able cancer. 









Homeless aged women. 

1891 


2 2.25 

No. 

5 

15 


15 

Aged men and women. 

1883 

(13) 


No. 

7 

5 


5 

Indigent volunteer firemen... 

1890 


No. 

16 

11 

a 


Impoverished aged women... 

1870 

200 


No. 

5 

1 


1 

Aged women. 

1905 

300 


No. 

4 

3 


3 

Homeless aged women. 

1872 


4. 85 

No. 

2 

16 


16 

Homeless aged men. 

1866 


(H) 

( 8 ) 

5 

31 

31 


Aged couples. 

1866 


2 4.34 

No. 

3 

(5) 


15) 

Ministers, their wives and 

1894 

(16) 


No. 

r 

2 

1 

i 

widows. 










1 For boarders only. 

® Average of maximum and minimum amount. 
8 Confinement fee, $55 if able. 

< Equipment. 


6 Not reported. 

6 According to ability to pay. 

7 Includes report of St. Francis Homes at Gardenville and Williamsville. 

8 No rule against admission. 






























































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


221 


OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF TEAR. 



Land, 

build- 

In- 

B 

& 

a 

a 

Total. 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

vested 

funds. 

a 

o 

+3 

a 

4-> 

*43 

1 

$228,000 

$110,000 

$118,000 

23 

30,000 

30,000 


24 

85,000 

85,000 


25 

4 500 

* 500 


26 

44,785 

43,000 

1,785 

27 

42,QOO 

42,000 


28 

29 

7 500,000 

500,000 


30 

33,060 

33,060 


31 

23,199 

15,000 

8,199 

32 

6,000 

6,000 


33 

8,000 

5,000 

3,000 

34 


15,000 


35 

784,497 

284,497 

500,000 

36 

32,244 

28,900 

3,344 

37 

43,105 

20,000 

23,105 

38 

68,000 

50,000 

18,000 

39 

35,000 

28,000 

7,000 

40 

37,120 

37,120 


41 

43,000 

12,000 

31,000 

42 

( ll ) 

(“) 


43 

( 8 ) 

( 6 ) 

( e ) 

44 

12 62,605 

53,505 

9,100 

45 

96,016 

35,000 

61,016 

46 

60,000 

60,000 


47 

53,688 

33,000 

20,688 

48 

164,000 

21,000 

143,000 

49 

135,095 

117,128 

17,967 

50 

42,478 

10,250 

32,228 

51 

25,641 

10,000 

15,641 

52 

93,600 

20,000 

73,600 

53 

(15) 

(10) 

(15) 

54 

(15) 

(15) 

(15) 

55 

13,500 

3,000 

10,500 

56 


INMATES PRESENT AT CLOSE OF YEAR. 


Adults. 


Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Permanently 

dependent. 

61 


61 

61 

221 

221 



40 


40 

8 

10 


10 


32 

10 

22 

32 

38 


3R 


9 


9 


269 

104 

165 

269 

43 

43 



14 


14 

14 

9 


9 

9 

( 6 ) 


( 6 ) 

( 5 ) 

21 

5 

16 

21 

77 

35 

42 


42 

20 

22 

42 

34 


34 

4 

35 

4 

31 

35 

28 

( 6 ) 

( s ) 

28 

40 

( 6 ) 

( 5 ) 

40 

23 

1 

22 

23 

163 

88 

75 

163 

10 


10 

10 

32 

5 

27 

32 

22 


22 

22 

52 

18 

34 

52 

25 


25 

25 

28 

2 

26 

28 

70 

70 

.... 

65 

14 


14 

14 

16 


16 

16 

16 


16 

16 

30 

30 

.... 

30 

15 

10 

5 

15 

3 

2 

1 

3 



Children. 

Temporarily 

dependent. 

Wayward or 
delinquent. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Orphan or de¬ 

pendent. 

Received with 

parent. 

Delinquent. 









221 

10 








32 

23 

14 

9 


23 

... 










38 

21 

( 5 ) 

( 5 ) 


21 

... 

9 









43 







































77 

.... 

33 

21 

12 

33 





.... 

30 

6 


6 

6 
































































3 


3 

3 
















5 
































































RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 


Total. 


$17,304 
11,823 
4,400 
1,569 
8,213 

9,608 

( 5 ) 

7 90,418 
13,334 

6,568 

2,880 

( 5 ) 

3,277 

34,150 

4,065 

5,203 

6,857 

9,830 

10,605 

6,341 

( u ) 

2,849 

u 15,368 
4,587 

19,014 

2,554 


17,223 

21,452 


6,426 

3,042 


5,929 
(16) 

(16) 

1,546 


Derived from— 


Appro¬ 

pri¬ 

ations. 


Dona¬ 

tions. 


$700 

400 

598 

477 


12,362 


( 5 ) 


1,298 


(“) 


2,212 


$6,394 


510 

1,090 

1,238 

( 6 ) 

3,195 


6,400 

2,880 

( 6 ) 

300 

10,902 

1,697 
1,166 
1,311 

3,022 


2,487 

( ll ) 

214 

3,258 

1,389 

19,014 

211 

5,457 


744 

2,365 


(15) 

) 


( ls 


520 


Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 


Other 

sources. 


$659 

9,891 

500 

504 

4,526 


28,489 


160 


( 5 ) 


1,645 

1,861 

364 

338 

6,675 

5,692 

2,005 

( u ) 
771 
4,300 


1,363 

4,880 


200 


1,986 

(15) 
( 1S ) 
250 


$10,251 

1,932 

3,200 

155 

1,999 

7,893 

( 6 ) 
46,372 
13,334 

8 


310 

2,977 

21,603 

50' 

3,673 

5,208 

133 

3,615 

1,849 

( u ) 

1,864 

5,598 

3,198 


980 


6,886 

21,452 


5,482 

677 


3,943 

(15) 

( 16 ) 

776 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 


Total. 


$12,133 
12,037 
1,200 
1,398 
8,142 

10,069 

( 6 ) 

7 70,495 
14,224 

6,580 

2,168 

( 6 ) 

2,995 

35,975 

14,304 

5,174 

5,207 

9,973 

13,265 

3,097 

( ll ) 

2,868 

u 12,489 
5,217 

17,751 

2,502 


7,717 
19,803 


6,650 

3,037 


4,757 

(. 5 $ 

(15) 

1,009 


For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 


$12,133 
12,037 
1,200 

I, 398 
5,634 

9,627 

( 5 ) 

66,118 
14,224 

6,580 

2,168 

( 6 ) 

2,995 

35,475 

4,162 

4,928 

4,874 

9,973 

6,616 

3,097 

( u ) 

2,868 

II, 461 
5,217 

14,786 

2,502 


6,645 
16,739 


2,822 

2,816 

4,257 

05 ) 

\* 5 ) 
794 


For 

perma 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 


4,377 


( 5 ) 


500 


6,649 


( ll ) 


1,028 


2,965 


(15) 

(15) 


215 


9 Adults, $5; children, $3. 

Residents. $300; nonresidents, $500. 
u included m report of St. Francis Asylum, Bulfalo. 
u Includes report of Orphanage Department. 


13 From $300 to $500, and all property owned, 
n No weekly charge; $170 per year, 
it Included in report of St. Johnland Home. 

16 For ministers, $150; wives or widows, $100. 




















































































































































































222 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table III.-HOMES FOR THE CARE OF ADULTS 


© 

.Q 

a 

3 

« 

3 


m 

3 


57 

58 

59 

60 

61 

62 

63 

64 


65 


66 

67 

68 

69 

70 

71 

72 

73 

74 

75 

76 

77 

78 

79 

80 
81 

82 

83 

84 

85 

86 

87 

88 

89 

90 

91 

92 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


Supervised or conducted 
by— 


Class of inmates received. 


NEW YORK—Continued. 


Lockport: 

Odd Fellows’ Home 


Independent Order of Odd 
Fellows. 


Odd Fellows and their fami¬ 
lies. 


Mamaroneck: 

St. Michael’s Home. 

53 Mount Pleasant Ave. 

Middletown: 

Orange County Home for Aged Women. 

27 South St. 

Mohawk: 

Herkimer County Old Ladies’ Home. 

Main St. 

Mount Vernon: 

Martha Wilson Home. 

356 Franklin Ave. 

Mary Fisher Home. 

315 Grama tan Ave. 

Mary Louise Heins Home. 

East Lincoln Ave. 

New York Christian Home for Intemperate 
Men. 

Gramatan Ave. 

New Rochelle: 

Colburn Memorial Home. 

Clinton and Coligni Aves. 

New York City: 

Bronx and Manhattan Boroughs — 

Austrian Immigrant Horde. 

84 Broad St. 

Baptist Home. 

116 East Sixty-eighth St. 

Bowery Branch of the Young Men’s Chris¬ 
tian Association. 

153 Bowery. 

Chapin Home for the Aged and Infirm. 

151 East Sixty-sixth St. 

Clara de Hirsch Home for Working Girls. 

225 East Sixty-third St. 

Elizabeth Hotel for Girls. 

307 East Twelfth St. 

Emergency Shelter for Women with Children 
311 East Twelfth St. 

Florence Crittenton Home. 

21 Bleeker St. 

Free Home for Young Girls. 

,23 East Eleventh St. 

French Evangelical Home for Young Women 
341 West Thirtieth St. 

German Lutheran Emigrant House. 

4 State St. 

German Odd Fellows’ Home. 

Havemeyer and Tremont Aves. (Union- 
port). 

Girls’ Home (Madchenheim).,. 

217 East Sixty-second St. 

Grace Hospital (Home for the Aged and Tem¬ 
porary Home for Children). 

414 East Fourteenth St. 

Harlem Boys’ Home. 

136 East One hundred and twenty- 
seventh St. 

Hebrew Sheltering and Immigrant Aid 
Society’s Home. 

229 East Broadway. 

Home for* Aged and Infirm Hebrews. 

121 West One hundred and fifth St. 

Home for Aged Indigent Females. 

891 Amsterdam Ave. 

Home for Incurables. 

Third Ave. and East One hundred and 
eighty-second St. 

Home for Incurables. 

One hundred and eighty-ninth St. and 
Riverside Drive. 

Home for Old Men and Aged Couples. 

1060 Amsterdam Ave. 

Home for Scandinavian Immigrants. 

24 Greenwich St. 

Home for the Aged. 

213 East Seventieth St. 

Home for the Aged. 

Belmont Ave. and East One hundred and 
eighty-third St. 

Home for the Aged. 

135 West One hundred and sixth St. 

Home of the Daughters of Jacob. 

302 East Broadway. 

House of Calvary_I. 

5 Perry St. 


Midnight Mission, New 
York. 

Private corporation. 

Private organization. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Lutheran Church. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 


Austrian Society of New 
York. 

Private corporation(Baptist) 

Young Men’s Christian As¬ 
sociation. 

Private corporation. 

Trustees of the Baroness de 
Hirsch Endowment. 

Children’s Aid Society. 

Children’s Aid Society. 

National Florence Critten¬ 
ton Mission. 

Private corporation (Protes¬ 
tant Evangelical). 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Independent Order of Odd 
Fellows. 

German Baptist churches... 

Grace Church (Episcopal)... 


Children’s Aid Society 


Hebrew Sheltering and Im¬ 
migrant Aid Society. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 


Private corporation (Episco¬ 
pal). 

Private corporation. 

Swedish churches. 

Little Sisters of the Poor.... 
Little Sisters of the Poor.... 

Little Sisters of the Poor.... 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation (Roman 
Catholic). 


Erring girls. 

Destitute aged women. 

Homeless aged women. 

Impoverished aged women... 

Aged men and women. 

Aged members of the church.. 
Inebriates. 


Impoverished aged women.. 


Immigrants. 

Aged members of the church.. 
Destitute men. 


Indigent aged persons. 

Young working girls. 

Homeless working girls. 

Homeless women and their 
children. 

Fallen women and their chil¬ 
dren. 

Y oung girls. 

Unemployed educated French 
women. 

German Lutheran immigrants 
and emigrants. 

Odd Fellows and their fami¬ 
lies. 

Unemployed girls. 

Aged persons and indigent 
children. 

Homeless boys. . 


Hebrew immigrants and way¬ 
farers. 

Aged Hebrews. 

Indigent aged gentlewomen... 
Incurables. 


Incurable females 


Aged men and couples. 

Scandinavian immigrants 
and emigrants. 

Indigent aged persons. 

Destitute aged persons. 


Indigent aged persons. 

Homeless aged Hebrews. 

Destitute women with incur¬ 
able cancer. 


■3 

3 


c3 
© 


1893 

1887 

1884 

1895 

1891 

1888 
1898 
1877' 

1906 

1898 

1869 

1872 

1S69 

1897 

1863 

1901 

1883 

1870 
1888 

1873 
1886 

1895 

1896 

1907 
1S90 

1870 
1815 
1866 

1880 

1872 

1881 

1890 

1903 

1871 

1897 

1899 


x> 

© 

M 


s 

© 

§ 

3 

© 


S250 

300 

500 

500 

500 


400 


300 


500 


i 125 


42 

© 

© 

is 

© 

ft 

xj 

© 

M 


a 

3 

o 

B 

■< 


300 


300 


87.00 


4.20 


41.00 


53.00 

1.50 


5.00 

6.00 


5 3.75 


5 2.00 


5 9.00 


5.00 


ft 

X) 


o 

o 


No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

Yes. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

0) 

( 6 ) 

Yes. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

No. 

Yes. 


Paid employees at close of 

year. 

INMATES RECEIVED 
DURING YEAR. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

12 

12 

9 

3 

3 

26 


20 

7 

4 


4 

4 

’ 5 


5 

3 

2 


2 

6 

41 

13 

28 

3 

4 

2 

2 

9 

444 

444 


3 

4 


4 

8 

4,070 

3,470 

600 

20 

10 

2 

8 

10 

2,780 

2,780 


16 

11 

2 

9 

25 

69 


69 

9 

284 


284 

5 

738 

189 

549 

7 

410 


410 

4 

36 


36 

4 

399 


399 

8 

4,959 

1,845 

3,114 

21 

49 

26 

23 

3 

624 


624 

9 

5 

2 

3 

14 

850 

850 


10 

3,183 

2,598 

585 

39 

61 

34 

27 

35 

16 


16 

146 

116 

40 

76 

21 

17 


17 

23 

15 

11 

4 

8 

4,000 

2,320 

1,680 

. . . . 

101 

49 

52 

.... 

111 

38 

73 

.... 

72 

36 

36 

15 

18 

6 

12 

8 

72 


72 


1 Not reported. 


2 Included in “ other sources.” 


3 Includes “care of inmates.” 


4 Meals additional. 

























































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


223 


OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 



INMATES PRESENT AT CLOSE OF 

YEAR. 

RECEIPTS DURING 

YEAR. 


Adults. 

Children. 

Total. 

Derived from— 

Total. 

© 

’cS 

a 

© 

a 

© 

Permanently 

dependent. 

Temporarily 

dependent. 

W ay ward or 
delinquent. 

13 

-*-> 

o 

© 

13 

a 

© 

13 

a 

© 

Orphan or de¬ 

pendent. 

d 

s g 
^ *2 
© Q. 
© ^ 
© 
a? 

Delinquent. 

Appro¬ 

pri¬ 

ations. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources. 

40 

30 

10 

40 



7 

4 

3 

7 



$18,787 




$18,787 

57 


57 



57 







9,586 


$2,387 

$642 

6,557 

27 


27 

27 




V 





3,117 


1,038 

2,079 

24 


24 

24 









7,763 


5,159 

1,342 

1,262 

14 


14 

14 









6,753 


4,001 

( 2 ) 

3 2,752 

17 

9 

8 

7 

10 








9,421 


3,476 

3,577 

2,368 

26 

11 

15 

26 









6,327 


3,587 

2,050 

690 

50 

50 



50 








11,288 


5,798 

1,934 

3,556 

8 


s 

8.. 









1,573 


973 

600 

(■) 

(*) 

(>) 

(>) 

0) 

o 

0) 

0) 

0) 

o) 

(») 

c i ) 

9,359 


254 

1,432 

7,673 

92 

4 

88 

92 









22,750 


8,926 


13,824 

71 

71 

71 








28,153 


4,898 

14,441 

8,814 

65 

12 

53 

65 









29,604 


10,657 

5,710 

13,237 

139 


139 

139 








40,775 


40,775 





33 

33 


33 



10,753 

$1,631 

89 

640 

8,393 

10 


10 


10 


8 


8 


8 


3,186 

43 


3,143 

24 


24 



24 

9 


9 


9 


9,143 


6,793 


2,350 







28 


28 

28 



4,665 

2,844 


1,821 

21 


21 


21 








4,620 

708 

3,878 

34 

10 

8 

2 


10 


32 

17 

15 


32 


15,814 


2,086 

7,304 

6,424 

70 

44 

26 

70 



121 

61 

60 

121 



25,587 

9,572 

3,957 


12,058 

24 

24 

24 . 








4,594 

104 

3,749 

741 

17 

8 

g 

17 



8 

3 

5 

8 



6,030 


1,660 

4,370 

81 

81 


81 







16,027 

4,158 

213 

5,538 

6,118 

29 

24 

5 


29 


2 


2 


2 


35,654 

27,876 

7,778 

304 

167 

137 

304 








60,860 


55,329 


5,531 

105 

105 

105 









46,625 


4,997 


41,628 

295 

122 

173 

295 









274,641 


158,349 

77,306 

38,986 

59 

59 

59 



10 


10 

10 



20,034 


14,844 

5,190 

58 

38 

20 

58 







.... 


33,141 


23,940 

.. 

9,201 

30 

19 

11 

30 








10,837 


1,279 

9,471 

87 

280 

114 

166 

280 








17,175 




17,175 

180 


120 

180 









21,062 


21,062 



300 

115 

185 

300 









20,403 


6,189 

2,279 

11,935 

185 

80 

lO'i 

185 









39,273 


21,391 


17,882 

38 

3£ 

38 









9,764 

6,852 

2,464 

. 

448 















PAYMENTS DURING 

YEAR. 


For 

For 

perma- 

Total. 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

$15,696 

$13,381 

$2,315 

8,568 

7,932 

636 

5,413 

5,413 


2,986 

2,915 

71 

7,272 

6,472 

800 

8,798 

8,648 

150 

3,534 

3,534 


20,859 

t 1 ) 

« 

796 

796 


8,331 

8,331 


22,750 

21,434 

1,316 

28,136 

28,136 


22,426 

22,426 


38,851 

38,851 


10,753 

10,753 


3,186 

3,186 


9,143 

9,143 


4,007 

4,007 


4,358 

4,358 


15,814 

11,516 

4,298 

29,062 

21,062 

8,000 

3.259 

3,169 

90 

5,955 

5,955 


16,027 

16,027 


35,989 

35,989 


59,253 

53,585 

5,668 

53,197 

51,187 

2,010 

141,589 

134,789 

6,800 

17,813 

17,813 


21,765 

21,765 


10,500 

9,850 

650 

18,090 

18,090 

. 

11,538 

8,754 

2,784 

14,888 

11,235 

3,653 

46,349 

31,164 

15,185 

8,501 

8,126 

375 


VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 


Total. 


$101,100 

0 ) 

(*) 

37,365 

53,050 

17,500 

43,050 

160,000 

56,917 

2,400 

201,918 

88,700 

190.250 
644,458 
107,000 

45,000 

35,000 

( l ) 
25,600 
200,000 

179.250 

16,000 

0 ) 

154,052 

46,317 

526,163 
1,200,000 
1,370,000 

290,771 

397,557 
60,000 
( l ) 
342,000 

C 1 ) 

155,000 
64,124 


Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 


In¬ 

vested 

funds. 


$101,100 
0) 

17,071 

15,000 

19,000 

7,500 

35,000 

100,000 

46,917 


100,000 

77,000 

( l ) 

190,228 
83,000 
20,000 
35,000 

( l ) 
25,000 
200,000 
154,402 

16,000 

« 

154,052 

46,317 

425,485 
450,000 
500,000 

175,000 

161,000 
60,000 
0) 

342,000 

( l ) 
155,000 
36,000 


$70,800 

0) 

22,365 

34,050 

10,000 

8,050 

60,000 

10,000 

2,400 

101,918 

11,700 

0) 
454,230 
24,000 
25,000 


0 ) 


600 


24,848 


55,000 


100,678 
750,000 
870,000 

115,771 

236,557 


28,124 


57 

58 

59 

60 

61 

62 

63 

64 

65 

66 

67 

68 

69 

70 

71 

72 

73 

74 

75 

76 

77 

78 

79 

80 
81 

82 

83 

84 

85 

86 

87 

88 

89 

90 

91 

92 


& Average of maximum and minimum amounts. 


6 No rule against admission. 


7 For adults. 
























































































































































































































































224 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table III.—HOMES FOR THE CARE OF ADULTS 


X> 

B 

3 

a 

a 

o 

53 

3 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


■r. 

3 


NEW YORK—Continued. 


93 

94 

95 

96 


New York City—C ontinued. 

Bronx and Manhattan Boroughs —Continued. 

House of Mercy. 

Two hundred and fourteenth St. and 
Bolton Road. 

House of Rest for Consumptives. 

Bolton Road. 

House of the Good Shepherd. 

East Ninetieth St. 

House of the Holy Family. 

136 Second Ave. 


97 

98 

99 
100 

101 

102 

103 

104 

105 

106 

107 

108 

109 

110 
111 

112 

113 

114 

115 

116 

117 

118 

119 

120 
121 

122 

123 

124 

125 

126 

127 

128 

129 

130 

131 


Immigrant Girls’ Home. 

9 State St. 

Industrial Christian Alliance. 

170 Bleecker St. 

Isaac T. Hopper Home... 

110 Second Ave. 

Isabella Heimath. 

Amsterdam Ave. and One hundred and 
ninetieth St. 

Jeanne d’Arc Home. 

251 West Twenty-fourth St. 

Leo House for German Catholic Immigrants.. 

6 State St. 

Lutheran Pilgrim House. 

8 State St. 

Margaret Strachan Home. 

103 West Twenty-seventh St. 

Methodist Episcopal Church Home. 

Ninety-second St. and Amsterdam Ave. 
Mission of Our Lady of the Rosary. 

7 State St. 

Municipal Lodging House. 

432 East Twenty-fifth St. 

New York Foundling Hospital. 

175 East Sixty-eighth St. 

New York Home for Convalescents. 

433 East One hundred and eighteenth St. 

New York Magdalen Home. 

Dyckman St. and River Road. 

Peabody Home for Aged and Indigent 
Women. 

2064 Boston Road. 

Presbyterian Home for Aged Women. 

49 East Seventy-third St. 

St. Barnabas House. 

304 Mulberry St. 

St. Francis Home for Chronic Incurables_ 

609 Fifth St. 

St. Joseph’s Home. 

117 Broad St. 

St. Joseph’s Home for the Aged. 

209 West Fifteenth St. 

St. Luke’s Home for Aged Women. 

2914 Broadway. 

St. Mary’s Home for the Protection of Work¬ 
ing Girls. 

141 West Fourteenth St. 

St. Raphael’s Home.'. 

8 Charlton St. 

St. Rose’s Home. 

426 Cherry St. 

St. Zita’s Home for Friendless Women of 
New York. 

125 East Fifty-second St. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

229 East One hundred and twentieth St. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home.. 

533 West Forty-eighth St. 

Salvation Army Rescue Home. 

316 East Fifteenth St. 

Samaritan Home for the Aged. 

414 West Twenty-second St. 

Shelter for Respectable Girls. 

212 East Forty-sixth St. 

Swedish Lutheran Immigrant Home. 

5 Water St. 

Swiss Home. 

35 West Sixty-seventh St. 

Trinity Chapel Home. 

221 West Twenty-fourth St. 

Washington Square Home for Friendless 
Girls. 

9 West Eighth St. 

Webb’s Academy and Home for Shipbuilders 
One hundred and eighty-eighth St. and 
Sedgwick Ave. 


Supervised or conducted 
by— 


Sisters of St. Mary (Episco¬ 
pal). 

Private corporation. 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd 
S is ters of D ivine Compassion. 


Woman’s Home Missionary 
Society, M. E. Church. 
Private corporation. 

Women’s Prison Association 

Private corporation. 


Private corporation. 

Sisters of St. Agnes. 

Synod of Missouri, Ohio, and 
Other States. 

Private corporation. 

Methodist Episcopal Church. 

Parish of Cur Lady of the 
Rosary. 

City of New York. 

Sisters of Charity. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 


Presbyterian Church. 

Protestant Episcopal City 
Mission Society. 

Sisters of the Poor of St. 
Francis. 

Felician Sisters. 

Sisters of Charity (St. Vin¬ 
cent de Paul). 

Private corporation (Epis¬ 
copal). 

Private corporation. 


St. Raphael’s Italian Immi¬ 
grant Society. 

Sisters of St. Dominic. 

Private corporation. 


Salvation Army. 

Salvation Army. 

Salvation Army. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation (Epis¬ 
copal). 

Lutheran Augustana Synod. 
Swiss Benevolent Society... 
Trinity Church (Episcopal). 
Private corporation. 


Class of inmates received. 


Fallen women and incorrigi¬ 
ble children. 

Indigent consumptives. 

Fallen women and delinquent 
children. 

Dependent women and de¬ 
linquent and unprotected 
girls. 

Immigrant girls.:. 

Homeless unemployed men... 

Discharged women prisoners . 

Aged and convalescent men 
and women. 

Unemployed French girls.... 

German Catholic immigrants 
and emigrants. 

Immigrants, emigrants, and 
Lutherans. 

Fallen girls. 

Aged members of the church. 

English, Irish, and Scotch 
immigrant girls. 

Homeless persons. 

Homeless mothers and de¬ 
serted children. 

Convalescent women. 

Fallen and inebriate women.. 

Aged and indigent women... 


Aged women. 

Homeless women and chil¬ 
dren. 

Destitute, aged incurables.... 

Polish immigrants. 

Aged men and women. 

Aged Episcopalian gentle¬ 
women. 

Unemployed working girls 
and homeless women. 

Italian immigrants. 

Destitute women with in¬ 
curable cancer. 

Homeless intemperate wom¬ 
en and discharged female 
prisoners. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 

Fallen women and their chil¬ 
dren. 

Aged indigent persons. 

Unemployed working girls... 

Scandinavian immigrants.... 

Destitute aged persons. 

Aged Episcopalian women... 

Fallen unprotected girls. 


Private corporation 


Indigent aged shipbuilders, 
their wives and widows. 


Year founded. 

Amount of entrance fee asked. 

Amount asked per week. 

Colored persons received. 

Paid employees at close of 

year. 

INMATES RECEIVED 
DURING YEAR. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

1854 



Yes. 

n 

127 


127 

1869 



Yes. 

23 

159 

82 

77 

1857 



No. 

8 

364 


364 

1870 



No. 

3 

58 


58 

1889 


S3.50 

No. 

6 

879 


879 

1891 


Yes. 

8 

1,178 

1,178 


1845 



Yes. 

2 

275 

275 

1875 



No. 

23 

363 

198 

165 

1896 


3.50 

No. 

6 

1,100 


1,100 

1889 



No. 

13 

4,729 

1,576 

3,153 

1869 



No. 

8 

3,050 

1,970 

1,080 

1883 



Yes. 

4 

105 

105 

1851 



Yes. 

21 

12 

2 

10 

1883 



No. 

5 

275 


275 

1896 



Yes. 

34 

116,182 

106,742 

9,440 

1869 



Yes. 

132 

3,104 

1,430 

1,674 

1880 



No. 

3 

171 


171 

1833 



Yes. 


112 


112 

1874 



No. 

8 

5 


5 

1866 


3.00 

No. 

19 

3 


3 

1861 



Yes. 

9 

2,000 

197 

1,803 

1865 


3 5.50 

Yes. 

8 

277 

229 

48 

1896 



No. 

8 

16,000 

(!) 

(i) 

1868 

( 4 ) 


No. 

38 

43 

5 

38 

1850 

$400 


No. 

30 

4 


4 

1877 


Yes. 


1,200 


1,200 

1891 



No. 

5 

652 

112 

540 

1906 



Yes. 

1 

42 


42 

1890 



No. 

(i) 

1,213 


1,213 

1905 



( 5 ) 

18 

558 

558 


1902 



( 5 ) 

25 

1,176 

1,176 


1892 



Yes. 

14 

159 


159 

1867 

300 


No. 

6 

1 


1 

1872 


( 6 ) 

No. 

4 

660 


660 

1893 


5.00 

No. 

9 

4,500 

2,500 

2,000 

1S32 



No. 

4 

6 

3 

3 

1865 

250 

4.00 

No. 

4 




1866 



Yes. 

3 

106 


106 

1S89 



No. 

32 

7 


7 










i Not reported. 


2 Includes report of St. Ann’s Maternity Hospital. 


3 Average of maximum and minimum amounts. 













































































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


225 


OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 



INMATES PRESENT AT CLOSE OF 

YEAR. 



RECEIPTS DURING 

YEAR. 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Adults. 

Children. 

Total. 

Derived from— 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

Total. 

03 

a 

03 

"a 

a 

03 

Ph 

Permanently 

dependent. 

Temporarily 

dependent. 

wayward or 
delinquent. 

O 

03 

*c3 

a 

<D 

*03 

B 

03 

Ph 

Orphan or de¬ 

pendent. 

s 

o a 

03 C3 

£ S3 
gp< 

03 

A 

Delinquent. 

Appro¬ 

pri¬ 

ations. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources. 

179 


179 

4 

12 

163 

42 


42 



42 

$52,101 

$7,002 


$740 

$44,359 

$51,963 

$17,428 

$34,535 

$575,000 

$450,000 

$125,000 

93 

58 

30 

28 

58 









37,228 

$20,475 


38,856 

33,856 

5,000 

C 1 ) 

(i) 

392,618 

94 

314 


314 

78 

100 

136 

139 


139 



139 

98,686 

39,166 

412 

1,416 

57,692 

99,166 

91,313 

7,853 

274,000 

274,000 

95 

6 


6 

4 

1 

1 

64 


64 

1 


63 

15,359 

6,318 

5,575 

766 

2,700 

15,080 

15,004 

76 

60,000 

60,000 


9C 

7 


7 


7 








6,778 

5,359 

1,419 

6,601 

6,601 



97 

85 

85 



85 








8,386 



8,386 

9,784 

9,784 


(‘) 

0) 


98 

43 


43 


43 








10,898 


659 


10,239 

10,350 

9,925 

425 

128,191 

32,000 

96,191 

9S 

160 

81 

79 

141 

19 








55,443 


16,043 


39,400 

50,707 

50,707 


1,383,792 

579,182 

804,610 

10C 

65 


65 


65 








14,085 


1,062 

13,023 

14,071 

12,880 

1,191 

185,000 

185,000 

101 

22 

7 

15 


22 








9,938 


5,170 

1,041 

3,727 

10,899 

10,899 


200,000 

200,000 


10; 

8 

5 

3 


8 








9,995 


2,439 

6,669 

887 

8,903 

7,773 

1,130 

100,000 

100,000 


103 

13 


13 



13 







3,295 


3,295 


2,896 

2,896 


90,000 

90,000 


1(V 

107 

11 

96 

107 









21,150 


19,798 


1,352 

23,801 

23,801 


330,000 

300,000 

30,000 

loe 













7,530 


7,530 


11,067 

10,045 

1,022 

100,000 

100,000 


10C 

672 

653 

19 


672 


19 

ii 

8 


19 


60,377 

60,377 



60,377 

60,377 

425,000 

425,000 


10' 

305 


305 


305 


2,420 

1,242 

1,178 

2,115 

305 


2 463,306 

375,368 

32,183 

14,040 

41,715 

2 463,314 

432,163 

31,151 

2 674,000 

674,000 


lot 

12 


12 


12 






4,578 

2,338 

2,080 

160 

2,335 

2,285 

50 

14,000 

10,000 

4,000 

1(X 

65 


65 


65 


17 


17 


17 


94,990 

5,290 

759 


88,941 

40,347 

24,156 

16,191 

473,051 

424,051 

49,000 

11( 

30 


30 

30 









18,245 

4,514 

1,619 


12,112 

9,509 

8,252 

1,257 

99,774 

55,000 

44,774 

11 

45 


45 

45 









(i) 


(») 

0) 

(‘) 

(’) 


( l ) 

(») 


11 

45 


45 


45 


28 

11 

17 

28 



8,377 


2,311 

6,066 

8,052 

8,052 


180,000 

52,500 

127,500 

11. 

245 

113 

132 

245 



11 


11 

11 



56,998 

21,693 

21,270 

2,353 

11,682 

59,998 

28,498 

31,500 

274,000 

274,000 


11 

(i) 

m 

m 


(*) 


(l) 

0) 

0) 


( l ) 


13,304 

13,304 

13,294 

13,294 

80,000 

80,000 


11 

230 

14 

216 

230 





69,637 


8,992 

28,645 

32,000 

70,833 

69,249 

1,584 

506,500 

506,500 


11 

81 


81 

81 









28,938 


9,315 

19,623 

31,100 

31,100 

805,443 

403,100 

402,343 

11 

155 


155 


155 








10,710 


(1) 


( l ) 

11,117 

11,117 


123,000 

123,000 


11 

15 

m 

m 


15 


4 

(1) 

0) 

4 



5,3S6 


4,749 


637 

5,386 

4,524 

862 

35,000 

35,000 


11 

15 


15 

15 







4,202 


4,202 



2,322 

2,172 

150 

20,000 

20,000 


12 

19* 


125 


125 


3 

2 

1 


3 


9 265 

630 

460 


8,175 

9,199 

8,792 

407 

80,500 

80,500 


12 

90 

9C 


on 







51,296 




51,296 

49,426 

49,426 

_ 

36,201 

36,201 


12 

1% 

19t 



196 








83,594 




83,594 

83,791 

83,791 


154,180 

154,180 


12 

35 

35 


35 

10 

(i) 

0) 


10 


7,993 


4,656 


3,337 

7,918 

7,918 


70,000 

70,000 


12 

26 

11 

15 

26 






15,893 


6,802 


9,091 

16,198 

11,452 

4,746 

141,210 

40,000 

101,210 

12 

23 

23 

23 








7,769 


3,909 

3,483 

377 

4,005 

4,005 


29,580 

17,000 

12,580 

12 

45 

4= 


45 








55,317 


657 

9,135 

45,525 

54,737 

11,797 

42,940 

78,735 

78,735 


12 

22 

n 

11 

22 








11,206 


73 


11,133 

11,785 

10,782 

1,003 

154,834 

117,000 

37,834 

12 


c 

c 









3,100 


3,000 

10C 

. 

3,259 

3,25£ 

. 




12 

20 


2C 


2C 








7,357 

1,22C 

5,324 

25£ 

554 

6,403 

6,40C 

. 

49,600 

40,000 

9,600 

13 

45 

37 

13 

43 








85,942 




85,942 

77,817 

70,53( 

7,287 

2,142,458 

2,000,00C 

142,458 

13 


4 According to ability to pay. * No rule against admission. * For single room, $6; dormitory, $5. 


44153°—14-15 





































































































































































































































































































226 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table III.—HOMES FOR THE CARE OF ADULTS 


I 


B 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


3 


NEW YORK—Continued. 


132 

133 

134 

135 

136 

137 

138 

139 

140 

141 

142 

143 

144 

145 

146 

147 

148 

149 

150 

151 

152 

153 

154 

155 

156 

157 

158 

159 

160 
161 
162 

163 

164 

165 

166 

167 

168 
169 


New York City—C ontinued. 

Bronx and Manhattan Boroughs —Continued. 

West Side Lodging House. 

225 West Tnirty-fifth St. 

White Rose Home for Working Girls. 

217 East Eighty-sixth St. 

Brooklyn Borough — 

Andrew Johnson Scandinavian Home. 

5819 Seventeenth Ave. 

Baptist Home of Brooklyn. 

Greene and Throop Aves. 

Brooklyn Home for Aged Colored People.... 
1095 St. John’s Place. 

Brooklyn Home for Aged Men. 

745 Classon Ave. 

Brooklyn Home for Consumptives. 

240 Kingston Ave. 

Brooklyn Methodist Episcopal Church Home 
Park Place and New York Ave. 
Brooklyn Nursery and Infants’ Hospital.... 
396 Herkimer St. 

Faith Home for Incurables. 

546 Park Place. 

German Evangelical Home. 

643 Chauncey St. 

German Home for Recreation of Womeruand 
Children. 

Harway Ave. (Gravesend Beach, L. I.). 

Graham Home for Old Ladies. 

320 Washington Ave. 

Greenpoint Home for the Aged. 

137 Oak St. 

Home for Friendless Women and Children.. 
20 Concord St. 

Home for the Aged. 

464 Herkimer St. 

Home for the Aged. 

Bush wick and De Kalb Aves. 

House of the Good Shepherd. 

Hopkinson Ave. 

Lodging House for Homeless Women. 

78 Schermerhom St. 

Marien Heim. 

Eighteenth Ave. and Sixty-fourth St. 
New York Congregational Home for the 
Aged. 9 

125 Gates Ave. 

Norwegian Christian Home for the Aged >°.. 
1244 Sixty-seventh St. 

Ozanam Home for Friendless Women. 

48 Concord St. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

28 Raymond St. 

Salvation'Army Industrial Home. 

Keep and Hope Sts. 

Salvation Army Rescue Home. 

1009 Hancock St. 

Scandinavian Sailors’ Temperance Home.... 
172 Carroll St. 

Second Home for the Aged. 

Eighth Ave. and Sixteenth St. 

Tillary Street Lodging House. 

14 Tillary St. 

Wartbury Home for Aged and Infirm. 

2598 Fulton St. 

Wayside Home. 

356 Bridge St. 

Queens Borough — 

Hollis (L. /.)— 

Odd Fellows’ Home. 

South St. 

Springfield ( L. I .)— 

Foresters of America Home. 

Richmond Borough — 

New Brighton (S. /.)— 

Sailors ’ Snug Harbor. 

Stapleton (S. I.)— 

Mariners’ Family Asylum. 

Center St. 

West New Brighton (S. 7.)— 

Actors’ Fund Home. 

1547 Broadway (office). 

Norwich: 

Chenango Valley Home for Aged People. 

Fair and Canasawacta Sts. 
Ogdensburg: 

City Orphanage and Home for the Aged.... 
45 King St. 


Supervised or conducted 
by— 


Children’s Aid Society 
Private corporation... 


Private individual. 

Private corporation (Bap¬ 
tist). 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation (Meth¬ 
odist). 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

German Evangelical Aid So¬ 
ciety. 

German Lutheran churches. 


Private corporation. 

Ladies’ Benevolent Associ¬ 
ation. 

Private corporation. 

Church Charity Foundation. 

Little Sisters of the Poor.... 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd 

Brooklyn Bureau of Chari¬ 
ties. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 


Private corporation. 

Society of St. Vincent de 
Paul. 

Salvation Army. 

Salvation Army. 

Salvation Army. 

Private corporation. 

Little Sisters of the Poor.... 

Brooklyn City Mission and 
Tract Society. 

Private corporation (Lu¬ 
theran). 

Private corporation. 


Independent Order of Odd 
Fellows. 

Foresters of America. 


Private corporation 
Private corporation 


Actors’ Fund of America.... 


Private corporation 


Sisters of Charity (Grey 
Nuns). 


Class of inmates received. 


Homeless boys. 

Working girls and women.... 


Aged Scandinavian men and 
couples. 

Aged members of the church. 

Aged men and women. 

Aged men and couples. 

Consumptives. 

Aged members of the church. 

Young children and their 
mothers. 

Destitute incurable women... 

Aged Germans. 

Women and children needing 
recreation, and convales¬ 
cents. 

Aged gentlewomen. 

Homeless aged persons. 

Friendless women and chil¬ 
dren. 

Aged Episcopalians. 

Indigent aged persons. 

Fallen women and delin¬ 
quent girls. 

Homeless women and chil¬ 
dren. 

Aged Germans. 

Homeless aged persons. 


Aged women and couples.... 

Homeless women. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 

Fallen women and their chil¬ 
dren. 

Homeless seamen. 

Indigent aged persons. 

Homeless men. 

Homeless aged persons. 

Wayward girls. 


Odd Fellows, their wives and 
widows. 

Aged members of the order... 


Aged and infirm sailors. 

Mothers, wives, and sisters of 
seamen. 

Aged actors, actresses, and 
theatrical managers. 

Aged gentlewomen.. 


Aged persons and dependent 
children. 


T3 


T3 

G 

D 

o 




1865 

1895 

1903 

1869 

1890 
1878 
1881 
1883 
1871 
1875 
1881 
1898 

1851 

1882 

1870 
1851 
1868 
1868 

1891 
1895 
1910 

1903 

1901 

1900 

1902 

1901 
1889 
1878 
1891 
1875 
1880 

1891 

1895 

1801 

1843 

1902 

1896 
1885 


Amount of entrance fee asked. 

Amount asked per week. 

Colored persons received. 

Paid employees at close of 

year. 

INMATES RECEIVED 
DURING YEAR. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 


i $1.75 

Yes. 

9 

1,264 

1,264 



( 2 ) 

6 

310 


310 



No. 





$100 


Yes. 

13 

8 

1 

7 

150 


Yes. 

5 

4 

1 

3 

i 200 


No. 

16 

15 

13 

2 



Yes. 

40 

222 

95 

127 

100 


No. 

13 

9 


9 


(<) 

Yes. 

19 

116 

61 

55 

(6) 


No. 

12 

11 


11 

500 


No. 

15 

40 

16 

24 


3.00 

No. 

4 

660 

75 

585 

300 


No. 

14 

5 


5 

( 7 ) 

(0 

No. 

4 






Yes. 

18 

525 

78 

447 

200 


No. 

12 

6 


6 


Yes. 


54 

26 

28 



No. 

9 

400 


400 


8. 15 

Yes. 

2 

330 


330 

500 

No. 

3 

5 

2 

3 

300 


No. 





300 

( u ) 

No. 

2 

3 


3 



Yes. 

6 

897 


897 



(IS) 

10 

190 

190 




(») 

15 

373 

373 




Yes. 

4 

62 


62 


1 4.75 

Yes. 

6 

2,071 

2,071 



Yes. 


89 

54 

35 


8. 15 

Yes. 

6 

36,000 

36,000 

500 


No. 

5 

11 

2 

9 



Yes. 

3 

52 


52 



No. 

5 

6 

5 

1 



No. 

2 

1 

1 




Yes. 

259 

108 

108 


125 


No. 

7 

5 


5 



No. 

10 

8 

4 

4 

300 


No. 

2 

2 


2 



Yes. 

14 

75 

44 

31 


i Average of maximum and minimum amounts. 
a Colored only. 

* Exclusive of donations other than cash. 

4 No weekly charge; $8 per month for boarders. 


6 Not reported. 

6 All property owned. 

7 Entrance fee $75 and each year thereafter. 





































































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


227 


OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN: 1910-Continued. 



INMATES PRESENT 

AT CLOSE OF YEAR. 


RECEIPTS 

DURING 

YEAR. 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Adults. 

Children. 

Total. 

Derived from— 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

Total. 

a 

CD 

*03 

a 

<£> 

Permanently 

dependent. 

Temporarily 

dependent. 

Wayward or 
delinquent. 

' o 3 

O 

© 

c3 

a 

ai 

C3 

a 

<D 

Orphan or de¬ 

pendent. 

Received with 

parent. 

| Delinquent. 

Appro¬ 

pri¬ 

ations. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources. 

70 

70 



70 








$9,237 

S 3,506 

S 3 70 

$4,120 

SI , 241 

$9,237 

S 9 237 


$95,000 

$95,000 


132 

14 


14 


14 








3,556 

3,315 

241 

3,474 

3,474 



133 

3 

1 

2 

3 









53 


3 

50 


953 

953 


10,000 

10,000 


134 

72 

61 

11 

72 









3 14,499 


3 8,988 


5,511 

15,076 

15,076 


( 5 ) 

(5) 

$114,312 

135 

28 

6 

22 

28 









4,176 



4,176 

4,575 

4,575 


77,000 

65,000 

12,000 

136 

74 

57 

17 

74 









15,547 


3,887 

2,800 

S S60 

17,967 

17 455 

$512 

375,000 

175,000 

200,000 

137 

87 

45 

42 

87 



20 

8 

12 

20 



55,377 

20,914 

12,632 

21,831 

51,676 

39 975 

11,701 

447,400 

145,000 

302,400 

138 

53 

5 

48 

53 









10,547 

472 

927 

9,148 

12,199 

12,199 

393, 750 

285,000 

108,750 

139 

29 


29 


29 

.... 

85 

52 

33 

73 

12 

... 

21,684 

11,799 

4,527 

786 

4,572 

21,471 

19,682 

1,789 

92,500 

90,000 

2,500 

140 

53 


53 

53 









5,144 


3,684 


1,460 

6,330 

6,330 


64,143 

62,143 

2,000 

141 

262 

93 

169 

262 









31,969 


9,176 

16,095 

6,698 

26,021 

22,968 

3,053 

216,000 

216,000 

142 

8 


8 


8 


2 


2 

2 



4,425 


664 

2,972 

789 

4, 449 

4,117 

332 

37,250 

25,000 

12,250 

143 

81 


81 

81 









19,749 


10,158 

9,591 

16,600 

14,821 

1,779 

350,000 

150,000 

200,000 

144 

14 

- 

14 

14 









4,859 


794 

615 

3,450 

4,120 

3,120 

1,000 

25,884 

20,000 

5,884 

145 

10 


10 


10 


80 

14 

66 

78 

2 


11,810 

7,054 

2,312 

368 

2,076 

11,933 

11,226 

707 

86,000 

57,000 

29,000 

146 

54 

4 

50 

54 









11,561 


5,381 


6,180 

11,561 

11,561 


220,477 

90,850 

129,627 

147 

260 

103 

157 

260 









16,673 


16,673 


13,819 

13,819 


( 5 ) 

( 6 ) 

148 

380 


380 



380 

50 


50 



50 

75,482 

22,702 

971 

507 

51,302 

71,915 

70, 763 

1,152 

270,000 

270,000 


149 

7 


7 

1 

5 

1 

7 


7 


6 

1 

1,214 


632 

582 

1,200 

1,200 


7,000 

7,000 


150 

51 

24 

27 

51 









10,917 


8,412 

2,086 

419 

9,633 

9,099 

534 

51,621 

40,525 

11,096 

151 

















152 

15 


15 

15 









3,000 


3,000 



3,000 

3,000 


10,000 

10,000 


153 

56 


56 


56 








9,386 

5,481 

1,215 

489 

2,201 

9, 792 

9,563 

229 

50,653 

50,000 

653 

154 

45 

45 



45 








27,986 



27,986 

26,971 

26,971 


24,500 

24,500 


155 

75 

75 



75 








38,059 




38,059 

33,540 

33,540 


13 6,563 

13 6,563 


156 

13 


13 



13 

13 


m 


13 


2,029 


2,029 


2,193 

2,193 



157 

50 

50 



50 






12,546 


143 

10,705 

1,698 

14,033 

10,738 

3,295 

17,000 

17,000 


158 

270 

130 

140 

270 









21,066 


21,066 


17,453 

17,453 

100,000 

100,000 


159 

100 

100 



100 








6,800 


6,800 



7,000 

7,000 



160 

82 

26 

56- 

82 









14,178 


8,253 

4,870 

1,055 

12,228 

12,228 


75,000 

75,000 


161 

22 

22 



22 







3,710 

2,604 

758 

166 

182 

3,710 

3, 710 


12,000 

12,000 

162 

38 

32 

6 

38 









7,670 

528 


7,142 

7,737 

6,026 

1,711 

56,377 

44,560 

11,817 

163 

1 

1 

1 









751 


400 


351 

5,546 

1,486 

4,060 

48,034 

46,000 

2,034 

164 

891 

891 


891 









574,670 




574,670 

501,932 

481,797 

20,135 

17,165,950 

16,637,400 

528,550 

165 

30 

30 

30 









12,335 


6,630 


5,705 

10,271 

9,779 

492 

132,250 

25,000 

107,250 

166 

38 

21 

17 

38 









13,882 


1,900 


11,982 

13,882 

13,882 


334,491 

140,000 

194,491 

167 

11 

11 

11 









2,764 


1,790 

600 

374 

2,333 

2,273 

60 

22,000 

12,000 

10,000 

168 

55 

22 

33 

27 

28 

.... 

141 

71 

70 

74 

67 

... 

25,379 

9,037 

2,239 

5,417 

8,686 

h 24,795 

22,291 

2,504 

u 103,500 

103,500 


169 


s Per night. 

9 Not opened until 1911. 

10 Formerly the Scandinavian Old Ladies , Home. 

11 According to ability to pay. 


12 No rule against admission. 

18 Equipment. 

m Includes report of St. John of God Hospital. 


























































































































































































































228 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table III.—HOMES FOR THE CARE OF ADULTS 


a 

a 

a 

_o 

3 

4-> 

53 

CO 

a 


170 

171 

172 

173 

174 

175 

176 

177 

178 

179 

180 
181 
182 

183 

184 

185 

186 

187 

188 

189 

190 

191 

192 

193 

194 

195 

196 

197 

198 

199 

200 
201 
202 

203 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


NEW YORK—Continued. 


Oneida: 

Old Ladies’ Home of Madison County. 

27 Stone St. 

Ossining: 

Bethany Home and Christ Child Day Nur¬ 
sery. 

26 Ann St. 

Oswego: 

Home for the Homeless. 

East Third and Utica Sts. 

Oxford: 

New York State Woman’s Relief Corps 
Home. 


Plattsburgh: 

Samuel F. Vilas Home. 

Cornelia and Beekman Sts. 

Poughkeepsie: 

Old Ladies’ Home. 

50 South Hamilton St. 

Pringle Memorial Home. 

153 Academy St. 

Vassar Brothers'’ Home for Aged Men. 

193 Main St. 

Rochester: 

Church Home. 

509 Mount Hope Ave. 

Door of Hope. 

293 Troup St. 

German Home for the Aged. 

1262 South Ave. 

People’s Rescue Mission. 

134 Front St. 

Rochester Home for the Friendless. 

210 East Ave. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

Court and Exchange Sts. 

Saratoga Springs: 

Home of the Good Shepherd. 

State St. and Greenfield Ave. 

Retreat for Ladies and Homeless Girls. 

36 White St. 

Schenectady: 

Old Ladies’ Home of Schenectady. 

1519 Union St. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

449 South Centre St. 

Seneca Falls: 

Johnson Home for Indigent Females. 

Sixth St. 

Sonyea: 

Craig Colony for Epileptics. 

Sparkill: 

Hope Hall. 

Box 99. 

Spring Valley: 

St. Elizabeth’s Home for Convalescent 
Women and Girls. 

Stuyvesant: 

Odd Fellows’ Home of Eastern New York.. 


Syracuse: 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

405 Hickory St. 

Shelter for Unprotected Girls. 

206 Roberts Ave. 

Syracuse Home. 

Hawley Ave. and Townsend St. 

Tappan: 

Door of Hope. 

German Masonic Home... 

220 East Fifteenth St., New York (office). 

Tarrytown: 

St. Faith’s House. 

53 South Broadway. 

Troy: 

Church Home of the City of Troy. 

1800 Seventh Ave. 

Deborah Powers Home for Old Ladies. 

Third Ave. 

Home for the Aged. 

192 Ninth St. 

Mount Magdalen School of Industry and 
Reformatory of the Good Shepherd. 
Peoples Ave. 

Presbyterian Home. 

90 Fourth St. 


Supervised or conducted 
by— 


Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

State of New York. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation (Episco¬ 
pal). 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Salvation Army. 

Private corporation (Episco¬ 
pal). 

Dominican Sisters. 

Private corporation. 

Salvation Army. 

Private corporation. 

State of New York. 

Volunteers of America. 

Society of St. Vincent de 
Paul. 

Independent Order of Odd 
Fellows. 

Salvation Army. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Salvation Army. 

German Masonic Temple 
Association. 

Private corporation (Episco¬ 
pal). 

Private corporation (Episco¬ 
pal). 

Private corporation. 

Little Sisters of the Poor.... 
Sisters of the Good Shepherd. 

Private organization. 


Class of inmates received. 

Year founded. 

Amount of entrance fee asked. 

Amount asked per week. 

Colored persons received. 

Paid employees at close of 

year. 

INMATES RECEIVED 
DURING YEAR. 

'aS 

O 

o3 

a 

a 

a 

9 


1885 

$250 


No. 

5 

i 


i 

Aged women, and children of 

1895 


( l ) 

Yes. 

5 

i 


i 

working mothers. 









Aged women 

1872 

400 


No. 

6 

3 


3 


1897 



Yes. 

44 

119 

32 

87 

veterans’ widows and 









mothers, and army nurses. 









Aged women . 

1888 

300 


No. 

5 

2 


2 

Aged women . 

1870 

200 


Yes. 

8 

5 


5 


1899 

300 


No. 

6 

1 

1 



1880 

2 175 


( 3 ) 

9 

1 

1 


Aged Episcopalian women 

1869 

<300 

52 

No. 

15 

36 

23 

13 

and dependent children. 









Destitute or fallen women 

1894 

( 6 ) 

(•) 

Yes. 

3 

126 


126 

and their infants. 









Aged men and women. 

1899 

300 


No. 

3 

9 

5 

4 

Homeless men. .. 

1889 


2 1.13 

Yes. 

15 

22,500 

22,500 


Impoverished aged women... 

1849 

2 275 


Yes. 

11 

4 

4 

Homeless unemployed men.. 

1904 



( 3 ) 

8 

91 

91 



1870 


4.00 

No. 

7 

2 


2 

Homeless women. 

1880 


7.00 

No. 

2 

112 


112 

Aged and homeless women.. 

1868 

300 


No. 

6 

3 


3 

Homeless unemployed men.. 

1907 



( 3 ) 

3 

105 

105 


Impoverished women. 

1885 



f 3 ) 

4 

2 


2 

Epileptics. 

1894 


(•) 

Yes. 

213 

252 

166 

86 

Discharged prisoners. 

1896 


Yes 

5 

180 

ISO 


Convalescent women and 

( 7 ) 



Yes. 

( 7 ) 

540 


540 

girls. 







Odd Fellows and their fam- 

1906 



No. 

4 

2 

2 


ilies. 









Homeless unemployed men 

1905 



(3) 

7 

208 

208 


Unprotected or wayward girls 

1877 



Yes. 

10 

41 


41 

Aged women. 

1853 


2.00 

No. 

15 

15 


15 

Fallen women and their 

1905 



Yas. 

4 

57 


57 

children. 









Masons and their families.... 

1877 



No. 

6 

1 


1 

Fallen girls and their infants. 

1898 



No. 

2 

17 


17 

Indigent Episcopalian worn- 

1854 

100 


No. 

5 

3 


3 

en7 









Aged gentlewomen. 

1S83 

200 


No. 

4 

2 


2 

Indigent aged persons. 

1873 



Yes. 


41 

17 

24 

Fallen women and delin- 

1884 


2.00 

No. 

3 

81 


81 

quent girls. 









Aged members of the church. 

1871 

100 


No. 

4 

2 


2 


1 Children 5 cents per day. 


2 Average of maximum and minimum amounts. 


* No rule against admission. 


4 For adults. 































































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


229 


OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


INMATES PRESENT AT CLOSE OF YEAR. 


RECEIPTS 

DURING 

YEAR. 


PAYMENTS DURING 

YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Adults. 

Children. 

Total. 

Derived from— 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 
perma¬ 
nent 
im¬ 
prove¬ 
ments. 1 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

Total. 

c3 

s 

^© 

a 

© 

Permanently 

dependent. 

Temporarily 

dependent. 

Wayward or 
delinquent. 

73 

O 

H 

© 

c3 

a 

cj 

73 

a 

© 

Orphan or de¬ 

pendent. 

Received with 

parent. 

Delinquent. 

Appro¬ 

pri¬ 

ations. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources. 

14 


14 

14 









$5,829 


$819 


$5,010 

$2,602 

$2,602 


$27,776 

$5,000 

$22,776 

170 

5 


5 

5 



20 

10 

10 

20 



3,534 


3,534 


2,968 

2,968 


8,800 

7,500 

1,300 

171 

23 


23 

23 









5,296 


811 

$1,931 

2,554 

4,580 

4,580 


54,000 

20,000 

34,000 

172 

198 

45 

153 

198 






% 



50,285 

$50,079 

206 


49,530 

38,824 

$10,706 

318,984 

318,984 

173 

17 


17 

17 









2,443 


600 

1,843 

3,857 

3,857 


75,663 

40,000 

35,663 

174 

32 


32 

32 









10,311 


3,411 

1,000 

5,900 

9,068 

9,068 


217,724 

70,000 

147,724 

175 

10 

10 


10 









11,000 




11,000 

11,000 

10,000 

1,000 

310,000 

60,000 

250,000 

176 

20 

20 


20 









11,350 




11,350 

9,531 

9,531 


278,150 

50,000 

228,150 

177 

24 


24 

24 



41 

27 

14 

41 



10,543 

1,259 

4,108 

2,103 

3,073 

10,488 

10,488 


120,000 

60,000 

60,000 

178 

17 


17 

3 

6 

8 

3 


3 

2 

i 


2,150 


1,850 

300 

2,000 

2,000 


6,000 

6,000 

179 

34 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

34 






8,895 


4,140 

3,977 

778 

5,613 

4,959 

654 

110,087 

90,000 

20,087 

180 

289 

289 


289 








15,989 


3,000 

10,040 

2,949 

12,705 

12,705 


63,000 

60,000 

3,000 

181 

52 


52 

52 









9,992 

104 

3,500 

6,388 

9,976 

9,676 

300 

230,000 

30,000 

200,000 

182 

35 

35 



35 








17,877 



17,877 

14,902 

14,902 


63,106 

63,106 


183 

28 


28 

28 









( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

25,000 

(7) 

( 7 ) 

184 

19 


19 


19 








4,112 

486 

2,459 

1,167 

4,288 

4,108 

180 

12,000 

12,000 


185 

24 


24 

24 









4,418 


1,794 

523 

2,101 

6,712 

6,527 

185 

94,275 

42,000 

52,275 

186 

14 

14 



14 








8,294 




8,294 

8,252 

8,252 


8 1,755 

8 1,755 


187 

20 


20 

20 









9,645 




9,645 

7,835 

7,835 


225,000 

10,000 

215,000 

188 

871 

436 

435 

871 



500 

290 

210 

500 



355,631 

346,061 


6,519 

3,051 

329,050 

253,258 

75,792 

1,103,692 

1,103,692 


189 

32 

32 

3 9 




6,888 

6,888 

6,888 

6,888 

15,000 

15,000 


190 

( 1 ) 

m 


( 7 ) 


( 7 ) 


( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 



( 7 ) 


( 7 ) 


C) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

0 

( 7 ) 


191 

3 

2 

1 

3 








4,740 


1,215 


3,525 

4,130 

3,941 

189 

21,416 

19,399 

2,017 

192 

50 

50 



50 








13,552 



13,552 

12,418 

12,418 


7,446 

7,446 


193 




48 


48 



48 

7,406 


1,274 

4,663 

1,469 

7,551 

7,551 


51,536 

33,171 

18,365 

194 

55 


55 

55 









41,926 

1,079 

1,236 

3,606 

36,005 

14,480 

12,030 

2,450 

253,225 

75,000 

178,225 

195 

5 


5 



5 

10 

(7\ 

( 7 ) 


10 


4 030 


4,030 



4,031 

4,031 


20,000 

20,000 


196 

24 

14 

10 

24 







16,471 


16,471 



15,805 

15,805 


185,510 

174,000 

11,510 

197 

H 

11 


ii 

10 

3 



10 


5,481 


5,481 



5,413 

5,413 


20,000 

20,000 


198 

11 


11 

H 






4,229 


475 


3,754 

3,737 

3,737 


83,017 

20, (XX) 

63,017 

199 

16 


16 

16 









3,625 



300 

3,325 

3,185 

3,185 


110,000 

40,000 

70,000 

200 

173 

00 

ft** 

17*1 









11,000 


( 7 ) 


( 7 ) 

10,235 

10,235 


( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 


201 

109 


100 



109 

9 


9 



9 

20,200 

6,184 

320 

1,940 

11,756 

21,673 

17,387 

4,286 

130,000 

130,000 


202 

10 


10 

10 








3,389 

880 


2,509 

3,461 

3,461 


43,000 

10,000 

33,OOC 

203 

6 

For 

child! 

en. 


6 

Acco 

rding 

to ab 

lity 

to p 

ay. 

7 Not 

reported 


» Equ 

ipment. 

9 

No •week 

1 

Jy charge; 

$150 per j 

ear. 













































































































































































































































230 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table III _ HOMES FOR THE CARE OF ADULTS 


& 

1 

a 

o 

2 
& 
0Q 

a 


204 

205 

206 

207 

208 

209 

210 

211 

212 

213 

214 

215 

216 

217 

218 

219 

220 
221 

1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

1 

2 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


NEW YORK—Continued. 

Troy—C ontinued. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home..'... 

149 River St. 

Seton Home.. 

548 River St. 

Tuckahoe: 

St. Eleanora’s Home for Convalescents. 

Scarsdale Road. 

Utica: 

Home for Aged Men and Couples.. 

1200 Sunset Ave. 

Home for the Homeless.. 

32 Faxton St. 

Masonic Home.. 

Bleecker St. 

St. Elizabeth’s Hospital and Home (Home 
Department). 

724 Columbia St. 

St. Luke’s Hospital and Home (Home De¬ 
partment). 

512 Whitesboro St. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

554 Bleecker St. 

Waterford: 

Breslin Old Ladies’ Home. 

70 Second St. 

Watertown: 

Henry Keep Home.. 

920 Washington St. 

Watervliet: 

Bethesda Home.. 

1627 Third Ave. 

White Plains: 

Campbell Convalescent Cottages.. 


Presbyterian Rest for Convalescents. 
69 North Broadway. 
Williamsville: 

Blocher Homes. 

Evans St. 

St. Francis Home for the Aged.. 


Yonkers: 

Home for Aged and Infirm. 

Riverdale Ave. 

St. John’s Home for Aged Women. 
5 Hudson St. 

NORTH CAROLINA. 


Asheville : 

Faith Cottage Rescue Home. 

53 Atkinson St. 

Lindley Training School. 

R. D. 2 (Candler P. O.). 
Charlotte: 

Florence Crittenton Industrial Home. 
513 North McDowell St. 
Goldsboro: 

Odd Fellows’ Home. 


Greensboro: 

Rest Cottage. 

900 Silver Run Ave. 

Raleigh: 

North Carolina Soldiers’ Home. 
Newbeme Ave. 

St. Luke’s Home. 

South St. 

Salem: 

Widows’ House. 

Main and Academy Sts. 

Wilmington: 

Catherine Kennedy Home. 

Princess St. 

Winston-Salem: 

Salem Home. 

Main St. 

NORTH DAKOTA. 

Fargo: 

Florence Crittenton Home. 

713 Thirteenth St., south. 

Lisbon: 

North Dakota Soldiers’ Home.. 


Supervised or conducted 
by— 


Salvation Army. 


Sisters of Charity (St. Vin¬ 
cent de Paul). 

Sisters of Charity. 


Private corporation. 
Private corporation. 


Masonic Grand Lodge of 
New York. 

Sisters of Third Order of St. 
Francis. 

Grace Church (Episcopal)... 
Salvation Army.. 


Trustees of Thomas Breslin 
Endowment. 

Trustees of Henry Keep En¬ 
dowment. 

Private corporation.. 


Society of the New York 
Hospital. 


Private corporation. 
Private corporation. 


Sisters of Third Order of St. 
Francis. 

Independent Order of B’nai 
B’rith. 

St. John’s Episcopal Church. 


Private corporation. 
Private corporation. 


National Florence Crittenton 
Mission. 

Independent Order of Odd 
Fellows. 

Apostolic Holiness Church.. 


State of North Carolina. 
King’s Daughters.. 


Moravian Church. 

Ladies’ Benevolent Society.. 
Private corporation. 


National Florence Crittenton 
Mission. 


State of North Dakota. 


Class of inmates received. 


Homeless unemployed men.. 

Working girls.. 

Convalescents.. 

Aged men and couples.. 

Impoverished aged women.. 

Masons and their families_ 

Aged women.. 

Aged women. 

Homeless unemployed men... 

Indigent aged women.. 

Aged men and women.. 

Homeless women and chil¬ 
dren. 

Convalescents from other in¬ 
stitutions under the care oJ 
the New York Hospital 
Society. 

Convalescents and over¬ 
worked women. 

Aged persons. 

Homeless men and women... 

Members of the order and 
their widows. 

Aged Episcopalian women... 


Fallen women and thir in¬ 
fants. 

Fallen girls and their infants. 


Fallen girls and their infants. 

Odd Fellows and their fami¬ 
lies. 

Fallen women and their in¬ 
fants. 

Confederate veterans. 

Homeless aged women. 


Homeless widows, members 
of the church. 

Destitute aged gentlewomen.. 


Aged women and destitute 
children. 


Homeless or fallen women and 
their children. 

Veterans, their wives and 
widows. 


■o 

13 

3 

o 


C3 

CD 

£ 


1906 

1900 

1901 

1882 

1866 

1891 
1866 

1869 

1908 

1888 

1879 

1902 

1907 

1893 

1902 

1902 

1882 

1892 

1903 

1891 

1901 

1892 
1903 

1885 

1894 

1770 

1895 
1887 

1891 

1891 


1 

Amount of entrance fee asked. 

Amount asked per week. 

Colored persons received. 

Paid employees at close of 

year. 

INMATES RECEIVED 
DURING YEAR. 

j Total. 

Male. 

Female. 



(i) 

2 

123 

123 



3 $4.00 

No. 

5 

29 


29 


Yes. 

14 

1,025 

470 

555 

« 


No. 

10 

13 

8 

5 

$200 


No. 

10 

2 


2 



No. 

69 

82 

54 

28 

( s ) 

(•) 

Yes. 


5 


5 


7.00 

Yes. 

27 

3 


3 


(i) 

4 

46 

46 


200 


No. 

2 

1 


1 

150 


No. 

16 

2 


2 


Yes. 

3 

21 


21 



No. 

22 

619 

(«) 

(4) 


3.00 

No. 

8 

329 

329 

2,650 


No. 

5 

6 

3 

3 

( 6 ) 


No. 

2 

9 

5 

4 



No. 

18 

6 

3 

3 

(“) 

32 3.75 

No. 

4 

1 


1 



No. 


15 


15 

50 

(13) 

No. 

3 

14 


14 

3 15 


No. 

2 

9 


9 



No. 

8 

30 

14 

16 


2.50 

No. 


85 


85 



No. 

18 

130 

130 



2.50 

No. 

4 

7 


7 


( 6 ) 

No. 





100 

3.00 

No 

2 

2 


2 


( 6 ) 

No. 

1 

11 

3 

8 


(*) 

Yes. 

3 

125 


125 


Yes. 

13 

19 

16 

3 


1 No rule against admission. 

2 Equipment. 

3 Average of maximum and minimum amounts. 
< Not reported. 


5 Men, $300; couples, $600. 

6 According to ability to pay. 

7 Included in report of St. Elizabeth’s Hospital. 

8 Includes report of St. Luke’s Hospital. 






























































































































GENERAL TABLES 


231 


OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 



INMATES PRESENT AT CLOSE OF 

YEAR. 




RECEIPTS 

DURING 

YEAR. 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Adults. 

Children. 

Total. 

Derived from— 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

Total. 

<6 

a 

Female. 

Permanently 

dependent. 

Temporarily 

dependent. 

Wayward or 
delinquent. 

3 

o 

Eh 

© 

13 

a 

Female. 

Orphan or de¬ 

pendent. 

Received with 

parent. 

Delinquent. 

Appro¬ 

pri¬ 

ations. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources. 

17 

17 



17 








$5,229 




$5,229 

$6,634 

$6,634 


*$1,775 

' *$1,775 


36 


36 


36 








8,192 


$89 

$8,103 

8,122 

8,122 


30,000 

30,000 


20 

10 

10 


20 


15 

7 

8 

15 



(*) 


( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

16,135 

16,135 


( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


60 

40 

20 

60 









7,200 


200 


7,000 

10,000 

9,000 

$1,000 

270,000 

70,000 

*200,000 

60 


60 

60 









10,633 


102 

400 

10,131 

10,404 

10,404 

280,000 

70,000 

210,000 

311 

201 

110 

311 



92 

35 

57 

92 



84,357 


84,357 


104,634 

79,168 

25,466 

1,000,000 

1,000,000 

18 


18 

18 









(7) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

(7) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

14 


14 

14 









3 45,952 

1,148 

31,999 

12,805 

s 42,903 

40,235 

2,668 

8 224,990 

200,000 

24,990 

16 

16 



16 








5,679 



5,679 

8,327 

8,327 

*2,639 

*2,639 


6 


6 

6 









(«) 


( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

1,800 

1,600 

200 

17,000 

17,000 


32 

1 

31 

32 









21,701 


21,701 

19,867 

19,867 


200,000 

160,000 

40,000 

21 


21 

14 

6 

1 

1 


1 


1 


3,125 

*445 

1,604 


1,076 

3,695 

2,188 

1,507 

15,000 

15,000 


IB 


16 


16 


41 


(41 


41 


(9) 

(*) 


(») 

* 25,306 

25,306 


( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


15 


15 


15 






8,668 


3,520 

2,718 

2,430 

7,711 

7,216 

495 

50,000 

20,000 

30,000 

16 

3 

13 

16 









5,730 


4,900 

830 

4,000 

4,000 


165,000 

65,000 

100,000 

41 

25 

16 

41 









(10) 

(10) 

( 10 ) 

(10) 

(10) 

(10) 

(10) 

(10) 

(10) 

(i°) 


64 

35 

29 

64 









16,136 

14,410 

1,726 

15,694 

15,694 


162,944 

162,944 


7 


7 









2,300 


2,300 



2,250 

2,250 


15,000 

15,000 


r . 


5 



5 

4 


4 


4 


2,003 


2,003 



1,989 

1,312 

677 

9,000 

9,000 


12 


12 



12 

10 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

10 


2,652 

475 

1,248 

741 

188 

2,640 

2,058 

5S2 

14,300 

12,000 

2,300 

7 


7 



7 

9 

4 

5 

9 



2,503 


1,985 

405 

113 

2,082 

1,196 

886 

8,000 

8,000 



2 


4 



155 

82 

73 

155 



33,440 


33,440 



23,933 

13,933 

10,000 

100,000 

100,000 




19 



19 

9 

9 

9 


807 


675 

132 


1,081 

1,081 


3,500 

3,500 





145 







30,000 

30,000 




21,200 

21,200 


( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

19 


12 

12 

1 








1,055 

55 

450 

550 

1,920 

1,920 


4,000 

4,000 




10 

IS 









125 




125 

100 

100 


25,000 

25,000 


19 


12 

12 









1,696 

150 

250 


1,296 

1,516 

1,516 


39,400 

18,000 

21,400 

n 

2 

9 

10 

1 








702 


590 

46 

66 

709 

674 

35 

3,500 

2,000 

1,500 







99 


49 


9 067 

3,262 


1,079 

5,626 

9,551 

9,551 


16,067 

8,000 

8,067 

59 

40 

37 

oy 

3 

40 








23,025 

w 1,443 


21,582 

15,744 

13,445 

2,299 

151,896 

60,500 

91,396 


9 The Campbell Convalescent Cottages are supported from the general fund of the 11 Nonmembers of St. John’s Parish, $300. 

Society of the New York Hospital. The expenditure reported is for this depart- 72 Boarders only. 

montonlv 13 *rom $5 to *20 per montn. 

10 Included in report of St. Francis Asylum, Buffalo. 14 From U. S. Government. 


U 

o 

& 

a 

§ 

a 

_o 

+2 

s 

■*-> 

m 

a 

M 

204 

205 

206 

207 

208 

209 

210 

211 

212 

213 

214 

215 

216 

217 

218 

219 

220 

221 

1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 

9 

10 

1 

2 






























































































































































































































232 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table III.—HOMES FOR THE CARE OF ADULTS 


Institution number. 

NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised or conducted 
by— 

Class of inmates received. 

Year founded. 

Amount of entrance fee asked. 

Amount asked per week. 

Colored persons received. 

Paid employees at close of 

year. 

INMATES RECEIVED 
DURING YEAR. 

"cS 

o 

Eh 

<V 

*C3 

a 

6 

a 

0> 


OHIO. 












Akron: 











1 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

Salvation Army .. 

Homeless unemployed men . 

1905 



0) 

4 

46 

46 



29 Viaduct St. 











Canton: 











2 

Aultman Home lor Aged Women 

Trustees of Aultman En- 

Aged gentlewomen 

1904 

$300 


No. 

6 

4 


4 


708 North Market St. 

dowment. 











Carthage: 











3 

House of the Good Shepherd. 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd 


1870 



Yes. 

15 






and destitute children. ~ 









Cincinnati: 











4 

Aged Germans’ Home. 

Private corporation 

\gerl Hermans or Herman- 

1891 

300 


No. 

10 

10 

10 



Burnet and Elland Aves. 


Americans. 









5 

Bodmann German Protestant Widows’ 

Private corporation. 

Aged German women. 

1881 

300 


No. 

7 

5 


5 


Home. 












Stetson and Highland Sts. 











6 

Cincinnati Union Bethel. 

Private corporation.. 

Homeless men and women 

1839 


8 $2. 63 

No. 

35 

127,575 

80,125 

47,450 


501 East Third St. 








7 

Home for Aged Colored Women. 

Private corporation . 

Aged women 

1897 

100 


Yes. 


1 


1 


2918 Park Ave. 











8 

Home for Incurables. 

Private corporation.... 

Incurables 7 .. 

1890 

300 


Yes. 

10 

7 

3 

4 


Beechwood Ave. (East Walnut Hills). 











9 

Home for the Aged. 

Little Sisters of the Poor 

Indigent aged persons 

1882 



Yes. 


36 

16 

20 


Clifton Heights. 











10 

Home for the Aged. 

Little Sisters of the Poor. 

Indigent aged persons 

1868 



Yes. 


31 

15 

16 


Florence Ave. 











n 

Home for the Jewish Aged and Infirm. 

Private corporation. 

Aged Hebrews. 

1883 



No. 

( 6 ) 

11 

9 

2 


Union and Burnet Aves. 










12 

House of the Good Shepherd. 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd 

Fallen women and depend- 

1855 



No. 

16 

123 


123 


Warsaw and Grand Aves. 

entand delinquentchildren. 








13 

Jewish Convalescent Home 8 . 

United Jewish Charities 

Convalescent Hebrews 

1911 



No. 






Glenway Ave. 











14 

Jewish Shelter Home. 

Private association... 

Unemployed Hebrews.. 

1888 



No. 

2 

1,800 

1,800 



711 Carlisle Ave. 










15 

Lawrence Home. 

Private organization (Epis- 

Young working girls. 

1896 


3.50 

No. 

4 

50 


50 


300 Broadway. 

copal). 










16 

Methodist Home for the Aged. 

Methodist Episcopal Church 


1900 

( 9 ) 

( 9 ) 

No. 

14 

2 


2 


College Hill. 








17 

Old Men’s Home. 

Private corporation... 

Indigent aged men. 

1876 

300 


No. 

(10) 

4 

4 



1310 East McMillan St. (Walnut Hills). 










18 

Protestant Home for the Friendless and 

Private corporation. 

Homeless women, fallen girls, 

1855 


( 9 ) 

No. 

16 

494 

54 

440 


Foundlings. 


and infants. 









433 West Court St. 











19 

St. Ann’s House. 

Sisterhood of the Transfigu- 


1898 



No. 






1022 Findlay St. 

ration (Episcopal). 

women. 









20 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

Salvation Army... 

Homeless unemployed men.. 

1904 



G) 

8 

183 

183 



1508 Freeman Ave. 









21 

Salvation Army Rescue Home. 

Salvation Army... 

Fallen women and their 

1909 



Yes. 

4 

88 


88 


Gilbert and Windsor Aves. (Walnut 


children. 










Hills). 











22 

Widows’ Home. 

Private corporation 

Indigent and aged women.... 

1848 

300 


No. 

n 19 

11 


11 


1310 East McMillan St. (Walnut Hills). 










Circle ville: 











23 

Home and Hospital. 

Private corporation 

Impoverished aged persons... 

1895 

( 9 ) 


No. 

4 





Cleveland: 









24 

Aged Germans’ Home. 

Private corporation. 

Indigent Germans... 

1886 

300 


No. 

4 

3 

1 

2 


8 7719 Detroit St. 











25 

Baptist Home of Northern Ohio. 

Baptist churches.... 

Aged members of the church. 

1907 

300 


No. 

4 

8 

4 

4 


*3334 Prospect Ave. 










26 

Church Home for Sick and Friendless. 

Private corporation (Epis- 

Aged women. 

1856 



No. 

7 

2 


2 


2227 Prospect Ave. 

copal). 










27 

Cleveland Home for Aged Colored People.... 

Private corporation. 

Indigent aged persons. 

1893 

150 


Yes. 

1 





2520 East Thirty-ninth St. 











28 

Dorcas Invalids’ Home. 

Private corporation..... 

Invalid women . . 

1867 

(12) 


No. 

10 

8 


8 


1380 Addison Road. 










29 

Eliza Jennings Home for Incurable Invalids. 

Young Woman’s Christian 

Homeless incurables. 

1888 

500 


No. 

7 

3 


3 


10603 Detroit Ave. 

Association. 










30 

Hebrew Orthodox Old Home. 

Private corporation. 

Homeless aged Hebrews 

1906 



No. 

2 

5 

2 

3 


5912 Scoville Ave. 











31 

Home for Aged Women. 

Young Woman’s Christian 

Homeless impoverished wo- 

1876 

300 


No. 

8 

3 


3 


2206 East Forty-sixth St. 

Association. 

men. 








32 

Home for the Aged. 

Little Sisters of the Poor.. 

Indigent aged persons . 

1870 



Yes. 


66 

33 

33 


2507 East Twenty-second St. 











33 

House of the Good Shepherd. 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd 

Fallen women, wayward 

1869 



Yes. 

7 





East Thirtieth St. and Carnegie Ave. 

girls, and unprotected chil- 












dren. 









34 

Independent Montefiore Shelter Home. 

Federation of Jewish Chari- 

Wayfaring Hebrews and their 

1904 



No. 

2 

800 

650 

150 


3*916 Orange Ave. 

ties. 

children. 









35 

St. Anthony’s Home for Working Boys. 

Roman Catholic Diocese of 

Homeless working boys. 

1907 


«2.00 

Yes. 

11 

94 

94 



8301 Detroit Ave. 

Cleveland. 










36 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

Salvation Army. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 

1904 



0) 

6 

38 

38 



715 Bolivar Road. 









37 

Salvation Army Rescue Home. 

Salvation Army. 

Fallen women and their chil- 

1892 



Yes. 

12 

270 


270 


5905 Kinsman Road. 


dren. 








38 

Sir Moses Montefiore Kesher Home. 

Private coporation. 

Aged Israelites. 

1882 



No. 

11 

13 


6 


5400 Woodland Ave. 












i No rule against admission. 

4 Included in report of adults. 







8 Equipment. 


6 Not reported. 









3 Includes children. 


* Average of maximum and minimum amounts. 




















































































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


233 


OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


INMATES PRESENT AT CLOSE OF YEAR. 


Adults. 


12 

20 

3 476 

31 

56 

605 

4 

35 

205 

200 

41 

90 


.2 

«s 

a 


12 


31 


375 


16 

95 

90 

24 


20 

3 476 

56 

130 

4 

19 

110 

110 

17 

90 


Children. 


Permanently 

dependent. 

Temporarily 

dependent. 

Wayward or 
delinquent. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Orphan or de¬ 

pendent. 

Received with 

parent. 

Delinquent. 


12 








20 









3 476 

c) 


c) 

(<) 



31 

56 













505 








4 

35 

205 

200 

41 









































90 

233 

c) 

« 

123 

.... 

110 




10 

17 
















57 

23 

7 
















12 

.... 

24 

11 

13 


24 

... 

32 









17 

11 




11 

... 

88 

17 

35 

14 

16 

10 

60 

27 

12 

38 

162 




















































































150 

120 


120 

120 




9 






47 

47 


47 




27 






20 

43 

<•> 

(•> 

25 

18 

... 

46 




RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 


Total: 


$6,770 

6,285 

32,000 

11,900 
10,224 

37,000 

801 

10,049 

7,051 

3,038 

23,668 

51,052 


Derived from— 


A ppro- 
pri- 
ations. 


Dona¬ 

tions. 


$5,800 

3,656 

6,000 

801 

5,649 

7,051 

3,038 

6,072 

10,304 


Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 


$1,280 


2,8 

27,000 


2,100 


1,521 

592 


Other 

sources. 


$6,770 
5,005 
( 5 ) 

6,100 

3,760 

4,000 

2,300 


16,075 
40,156 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 


Total. 


$5,526 

5,557 

30,000 

8,900 
10,362 

37,000 
787 
8,185 
6,644 
4,538 
13,963 
50,500 


For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 


$5,526 

5,072 

30,000 

8,900 

7,887 

37,000 
787 
7,719 
6,644 
4,538 
13,963 
36,000 


For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 


$485 


2,475 


466 


14,500 


VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 


Total. 


2 $825 

125,000 

400,000 

125,000 

105,200 

265,000 
500, 
71,000 
113,391 
90,000 
( 5 ) 

268,625 


Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 


2 $825 

35,000 

400,000 

80,000 

35,000 

150,000 

500 

70,000 

113,391 

90,000 

( 5 ) 

268,625 


In¬ 

vested 

funds. 


$90,000 


45,000 

70,200 

115,000 

1,000 


( 5 ) 


o 

& 

B 

§ 

a 

o 

’■£ 

•H 

a 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 

9 

10 
11 
12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 
21 

22 

23 

24 

25 

26 

27 

28 

29 

30 

31 

32 

33 

34 

35 

36 

37 

38 


10 

17 

57 

23 

12 

71 

32 

17i 

88 

17 

35 

14 

16 

10 

60 

27 

12 

38 

162 

150 


27 

20 

46 


10 


7 

23 


32 


1 

10 

1 


17 

50 

12 

7 


90 


( 5 ) 


27 


24 


17 

88 

16 

25 

13 

16 

8 

60 

27 

4 

38 

72 

150 

( 5 ) 


20 

22 


1,300 
4,191 
17,128 
6,625 
16,019 

300 

18,010 

2,488 

22,075 

1,578 

7.700 
3,000 
6,910 

640 

2.700 
( 5 ) 
3,200 
15,157 

6,114 
35,083 

1,900 
10,268 
14,120 
5, 710 
19, 421 


1,300 
571 
2,908 
425 
5,263 

300 


2,635 
9,155 
1,200 
1,968 


2,488 

1,793 

1,578 


9,282 


2,200 


3,000 

4,037 

290 


2,201 
3,200 
5,098 
6,114 
3,693 

1,900 
4,068 
14,120 
2, 715 
11,202 


2,100 

( 5 ) 


900 


1,344 


2,730 


985 
5,065 
5,000 
8,788 


18,010 


11,000 


5,500 


2,873 
350 
600 
6,126 


9,159 


30,046 


3,470 


2.995 

8,219 


1,476 

4,070 

33,913 

7,141 

14,815 

308 

14,052 

2,514 

21,657 

1,705 
7,000 
2,700 
6,882 
943 
7,890 
7,767 
2, 700 
14,152 
6, 453 
35,850 

1,900 
10,036 
14,167 
5,668 
13, 612 


1.400 
4,070 

22,109 
6,393 
9,693 

308 
14,052 
2,514 

19,959 

1,705 

6,000 

2.400 
6,882 

943 
7,890 
7, 767 
2,700 
13,686 
6, 453 
27, 787 

1,900 

8.767 

14,167 

5,668 

13,217 


76 


11,804 

748 

5,122 


5,000 
( 5 ) 
300,000 
213,257 
175,000 


5,000 
( 5 ) 
300,000 
34,407 
50,000 


1,698 


1,000 

300 


466 


8,063 


1,269 


395 


32,686 
12,500 

299,857 

7,000 
75,000 
15,000 
103,475 
3,200 
68,000 
61,616 
7,500 
( 6 ) 
65,000 
225,300 

9,000 
30,000 
2 5,341 
35.000 
215,513 


32,686 

12,500 

83,909 

7,000 
45,000 
15,000 
44,100 
3,200 
50,000 
27,578 
7,500 
( 5 ) 
65,000 
225,300 

9,000 
30,000 
2 5,341 
35,000 
55,000 


( 6 ) 


178,850 
125,000 


215,948 


30,000 

59,375 


18,000 

34,038 


( 5 ) 


160,513 


^ Exclusive of contagious and mental cases. 

8 Not opened until 1911. 

9 According to ability to pay. 


10 Included in report of Widows' Home, 
n Includes report for Old Men’s Home. 
12 Varies. 






































































































































































































































































234 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table III.—HOMES FOR THE CARE OF ADULTS 


a 

3 

a 

a 

3 


39 

40 

41 

42 

43 

44 

45 

46 

47 

48 

49 

50 

51 

52 

53 

54 

55 

56 

57 

58 

59 

60 

61 

62 

63 

64 

65 

66 

67 

68 

69 

70 

71 

72 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


OHIO—Continued. 

Cleveland—C ontinued. 

The Retreat. 

4916 St. Clair Ave. 

Training Home for Friendless Girls. 

3207 Franklin Ave. 

Victory Mission. 

230 Prospect St. 

Wayfarer’s Lodge. 

1440 West Tenth St. 

Columbus: 

Aged Germans’ Home. 

1323 East Main St. 

Columbus Home for the Aged. 

1776 East Broad St. 

Florence Crittenton Home. 

1166 Main St. 

Friends’ Rescue Home. 

73 North Harris Ave. 

Hannah Neil Mission and Home of the 
Friendless. 

Main St. 

House of the Good Shepherd. 

Broad and Sandusky Sts. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

584 High St. 

Dayton: 

Door of Hope... 

Fifty-fourth St. and St. Joseph Ave. 
Friendly Inn. 

231 South Jefferson St. 

Home for Widows and Destitute Women.... 
South Findlay St. 

National Home for Disabled Volunteer Sol¬ 
diers. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

341 East Fifth St. 

Delaware: 

Home for the Aged. 

East Cleveland: 

A. M. McGregor Home. 

Lee Ave. and Terrace Road. 

Elyria: 

Old Ladies’ Home. 

West Ave. 

Fostoria: 

Old Folks’ and Orphans’ Home. 

Columbus Ave. 

Greenville: 

Brethren’s Home. 

Chestnut and Jefferson Sts. 

Kirtland: 

Saints’ Home. 

Willoughby P. O. 

Lima: 

Door of Hope. 

213 East Wayne St. 

Lima Rescue Home. 

207 East North St. 

Lodi: 

Home for Aged Women. 

Madison: 

Madison Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Home. 

R. D. 1. 

Marietta: 

Washington County Woman’s Home. 

812 Third St. 

O BERLIN: 

Oberlin Missionary Home. 

110 East College St. 

Portsmouth: 

Home for Aged Women. 

Front and Chillicothe Sts. 

Rittman: 

Mennonite Old People’s Home. 

Marshallville P. O. 

Salem: 

Home for Aged Women. 

McKinley Ave. 

Sandusky: 

Ohio Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Home. 

Springfield: 

Clark Memorial Home. 

256 North Limestone St. 

Ohio Odd Fellows’ Home. 


Supervised or conducted 
by- 


Young Woman’s Christian 
Association. 

Non Partisan Woman’s 
Christian Union. 

Private corporation. 


Associated Charities. 

Private corporation. 
Private corporation. 


National Florence Critten¬ 
ton Mission. 

Private corporation 
(Friends). 

Private organization.. 


Sisters of the Good Shepherd. 
Salvation Army. 


Private corporation. 
Associated Charities. 


Woman’s Christian Associa¬ 
tion. 

U. S. Government. 


Salvation Army. 


Private corporation. 
Private corporation. 


Methodist Episcopal Church. 
Church of the Brethren. 


Church of the Brethren. 


Reorganized Church—Latter 
Day Saints. 


Private corporation.. 
Private organization. 


Private corporation. 
State of Ohio. 


Private corporation.. 
Private corporation.. 
Private corporation.. 
Mennonite Church... 
Private organization. 
State of Ohio. 


Woman's and Young Wom¬ 
an’s Christian Association. 
Independent Order of Odd 
Fellows. 

1 Residents, $40 to $50; nonresidents, $100. 

3 Average of maximum and minimum amounts. 

3 For bed or meal, 10 cents. 

«Includes wood yard. 


Class of inmates received. 


Fallen girls and their infants. 

Homeless and unprotected 
young girls. 

Inebriates and destitute un¬ 
employed men. 

Wayfaring men and women.. 


Homeless aged persons. 

Homeless aged persons. 

Fallen girls and their infants. 

Fallen women and their in¬ 
fants. 

Needy women and children.. 


Fallen women, delinquent, 
and unprotected children. 
Homeless unemployed men.. 


Fallen women and friendless 
girls. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 
Indigent aged women.. 


Disabled volunteer soldiers 
and sailors. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 


Impoverished aged women.. 
Indigent aged persons. 


Homeless aged gentlewomen. 


Aged members of the church, 
and orphans. 

Homeless and needy of the 
church. 

Homeless aged members of 
the church. 


Destitute and fallen girls. 
Homeless needy persons.. 


Impoverished aged women_ 

Veterans, their wives and 
widows, and Army nurses. 

Homeless aged women. 


Missionaries, and children of 
foreign missionaries. 

Homeless aged women. 

Aged members of the church.. 
Aged women. 


Veterans. 

Homeless aged women. 


Odd Fellows, their families, 
and Rebekahs. 


•o 

<v 

43 

a 

3 

o 


03 

a> 


1868 

1892 

1893 
1881 

1886 

1886 

1898 
1905 

1870 

1865 

1904 

1907 
1896 

1871 
1865 

1905 

1892 

1908 

1900 
1902 
1902 

1909 

1909 

1906 

1895 

1892 

1885 
1890 
1883 

1901 

1886 

1888 

1899 
1892 


44 

w 

OS 


a 

3 


a 


a 

3 

o 

a 

< 


0) 


$300 

300 

(*) 


150 


3 500 
300 

3 550 


3 1,000 


(“> 


300 


300 


200 


44 

® 

a> 

Si 

£ 

a 

•a 

44 


a 

3 

o 

a 

■< 


( 3 ) 


61.00 


( 13 ) 


3.00 


3.00 


6 According to ability to pay. 

6 For children. 

7 Not reported. 

8 No rule against admission. 


Colored persons received. 

Paid employees at close of 

year. 

inmates received 
DURING YEAR. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Yes. 

5 

38 


38 

No. 

3 

56 


56 

Yes. 

4 

832 

832 


Yes. 

7 

11,192 

10,168 

1,024 

No. 

5 

2 


2 

No. 

10 

9 

3 

6 

Yes. 

2 

81 


81 

No. 

2 

69 


69 

Yes. 

5 

121 


121 

No. 

.... 

56 


56 

( 8 ) 

7 

174 

174 


No. 

2 

71 


71 

Yes. 

1 

1,190 

1,160 

3Q 

No. 

5 

4 


4 

Yes. 

860 

761 

761 


( 8 ) 

2 

36 

36 


No. 

2 

3 


3 

No. 

7 

4 

2 

2 

No. 

6 

4 


4 

No. 

3 

16 

6 

10 

No. 

6 

9 

2 

7 

No. 

3 

5 

1 

4 

No. 

2 

64 


64 

Yes. 

.... 

3,000 

3,000 


No. 

3 

1 


1 

No. 

15 

10 

1 

9 

No. 

2 

3 


3 

No. 

4 

27 

9 

18 

No. 

2 

1 


1 

No. 

.... 

10 

3 

7 

No. 

4 

2 


2 

Yes. 

305 

504 

504 


No. 

3 

3 


3 

No. 

30 

37 

18 

19 



















































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


235 


OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


INMATES PRESENT AT CLOSE OF YEAR. 


RECEIPTS 

DURING 

YEAR. 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Adults. 

Children. 

Total. 

Derived from— 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

Total. 

<D 

■3 

a 

Female. 

Permanently 

dependent. 

Temporarily 

dependent. 

Wayward or 
delinquent. 

"gJ 

O 

"oS 

2 

Female. 

Orphan or de¬ 

pendent. 

Received with 

parent. 

Delinquent. 

Appro¬ 

pri¬ 

ations. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources. 

16 


16 



16 

6 

2 

4 


6 


$6 055 


SI, 607 

$690 

$3,698 

$6,118 

$5,172 

$946 

$85,980 

$30,000 

$55,980 

4 


4 


4 


18 


18 

18 



.3 804 


1,583 

458 

1 823 

3,080 

3,080 

20,000 

20,000 

68 

68 


4 

64 








2,791 


1,351 

1,200 

240 

2,791 

2,691 

100 


42 

38 

4 


42 








4 5 423 


5,190 

33 

4 200 

5,423 

5,423 


20.000 

20,000 


20 


20 

20 









4 360 


677 

744 

2,939 

3,932 

3,140 

792 

40.000 

32,500 

7,500 

46 

4 

42 

46 









25,231 




25,231 

22,719 

14,168 

8,551 

295,000 

50,000 

245,000 

11 


11 


11 


10 

6 

4 


10 


3 000 


1,912 

1,088 

3,000 

3,000 

12,000 

12,000 

42 


42 



42 

15 

9 

6 

15 



1. 424 


1,424 


1,392 

710 

682 

900 

900 


4 


4 


4 


19 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

19 



2, 462 


45 

484 

1,933 

2,656 

2,463 

193 

16, 775 

7,475 

9,300 

53 


53 

53 



160 

160 

93 


67 

O) 


( 7 ) 


(T) 

(T) 

( 7 ) 


( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

48 

48 



48 








15,749 



15,749 

13,360 

13,360 


14,227 

14,227 


18 


18 



18 







2,525 

$2,000 

500 

25 

2, 400 

2,000 

400 

6,000 

6,000 


14 

14 



14 








4, 085 

4,028 

57 


230 

230 


18,000 

18,000 


24 


24 

24 









3 878 


692 

527 

2, 659 

4,465 

4, 465 


30,500 

30,500 


3,492 

3,492 


3,492 









613,331 

3 591,275 



22,056 

581,500 

580,790 

710 

1,351,552 

1,351,552 


27 

27 


27 








5.673 



5,673 

5,187 

5,187 


ia 1,311 

10 1,311 


16 


16 

16 









2, 747 




2,747 

2,245 

2,245 


10.000 

10,000 

22 

3 

19 

22 









6,997 


5.377 

(U) 

13 1,620 

5,387 

5,387 


109,288 

100,000 

9,288 

21 


21 

21 









1,600 



1,600 


5.000 

5,000 


51.000 

35,000 

16,000 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 



( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 



( 7 ) 


( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

12.000 

12,000 


28 

s 

20 

28 



5 

3 

2 

5 



5 437 


5,437 



4,681 

4,412 

269 

2,500 

2,500 


4 

1 

i 

3 

4 









1,000 



1,000 

1,500 

1,000 

500 

5,000 

5,000 


10 


10 



10 







1,064 


1,064 


973 

973 


6,000 

6,000 


31 

31 


31 








1,059 


( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 


1,057 

1,057 



3 

3 

3 








3,700 


2,400 

1,300 

2,062 

2,062 


16,500 

16,500 


40 

2 

38 

40 









15,100 

15,000 

100 

13,750 

13,750 


66,500 

65,000 

1,500 

10 


10 

10 









2,516 

1,619 


897 

2,516 

2,516 


24,000 

10,000 

14,000 

3 


3 

3 



27 

9 

18 

27 



8,437 


2,905 

4,528 

1,004 

7,946 

7,946 


50,811 

26,900 

23,911 

g 


3 

8 









1,215 


550 

300 

365 

1,250 

1,250 


9,800 

9,800 


25 

6 

19 

10 

9 








3,918 


2,617 

967 

334 

3,870 

3,870 


29,300 

20,000 

9,300 

12 

12 

12 








2,500 


393 


2,107 

2,834 

2,256 

578 

26,325 

7,000 

19,325 

1 **Q1 

1 *}Q1 

1 391 









>5 216,274 

is 216,274 




260,234 

260,234 


1,000,000 

1,000,000 


13 


13 

13 









1,070 

300 


770 

2,640 

2,200 

440 

24,000 

10,000 

14,000 

90 

52 

38 

90 



157 

90 

67 

157 



43,739 


33,557 

6,182 

4,000 

41,992 

39,939 

2,053 

181,550 

175,000 

6,550 


» From United States Government. 13 From 15 to 25 cents per night. 

10 Equipment. 14 Residents, $200; nonresidents, $400. 

n Included in “other sources.” 13 Includes $130,274 from United States Government. 

13 Includes “care of inmates.” 


,Q 

a 

3 

a 

a 

o 


39 

40 

41 

42 

43 

44 

45 

46 

47 

48 

49 

50 

51 

52 

53 
54’ 

55 

56 

57 

58 

59 

60 

61 

62 

63 

64 

65 

66 

67 

68 
69 


70 

71 

72 











































































































































































































































Institution number. 


236 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table III.—HOMES FOR THE CARE OF ADULTS 


73 

74 

75 

76 

77 

78 

79 

80 
81 

82 

83 


1 

2 

3 

4 


1 

2 

3 

4 
b 
6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 


• 


NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised or conducted 
by— 


OHIO—Continued. 


Springfield— Continued. 

Ohio Masonic Home. 

National Pike, west. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

126 East Main St. 

Tippecanoe City: 

Feghtly Lutheran Home. 

Toledo: 

Flower Home for Girls. 

1324 Superior St. 

Home for the Aged. 

1616 Starr Ave. 

House of the Good Shepherd. 

3502 Lagrange St. 

Lutheran Orphan and Old Folks’ Home_ 

2465 Seamen St. 

Old Ladies’ Home of Toledo. 

3113 Collingwood Ave. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

27 Illinois St. 

Youngstown: 

Florence Crittenton Home. 

1161 McGufly St. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

329 East Boardman St. 


Masonic Grand Lodge of 
Ohio. 

Salvation Army.. 


General Synod of the Lu¬ 
theran Church. 

Methodist Episcopal Church. 

Little Sisters of the Poor. 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd. 

Synod of Iowa and other 
States. 

Private corporation. 

Salvation Army. 


National Florence Crittenton 
Mission. 

Salvation Army. 


OKLAHOMA. 

Carmen: 

Oklahoma Odd Fellows’ Home. 

Checotah: 

Odd Fellows’ Home. 

Darlington: 

Masonic Home. 

Oklahoma City: 

Nazarene Home. 

Bethany Station, R. D. 4. 

OREGON. 

Portland: 

Florence Crittenton Home. 

East Thirty-first and Glisan Sts. 

House of the Good Shepherd. 

East Twentieth and Irving Sts. 

Louise Home. 

373 Cable St. 

Mount St. Joseph’s Home for the Aged. 
East Thirtieth and Stark Sts. 

Odd Fellows’ Home. 

Thirty-first and Holgate Sts. 

Patton Home for the Friendless. 

975 Michigan Ave. 

Portland Commons Settlement 8. 

22 North Front St. 

St. Elizabeth’s Home. 

201 East Eighty-second St., north. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

61 East Third St., north. 

Salvation Army Rescue Home. 

392 East Fifteenth St., north. 
Roseburg: 

Oregon Soldiers’ Home. 

PENNSYLVANIA. 


Independent Order of Odd 
Fellows. 

Independent Order of Odd 
Fellows. 

Masonic Grand Lodge of 
Oklahoma. 

Pentecostal Church of the 
Nazarene. 


National Florence Critten¬ 
ton Mission. 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd. 

Pacific Coast Rescue and 
Protective Society. 

Sisters of Mercy. 

Independent Order of Odd 
Fellows. 

Private corporation. 

Pacific Coast Rescue and 
Protective Society. 

Sisters of St. John Baptist 
(Episcopal). 

Salvation Army. 

Salvation Army. 


State of Oregon 


Allentown: 

1 Good Shepherd Home. 

Sixth and St. John Sts. 


Private corporation (Lu¬ 
theran). 


2 

3 

4 

5 

6 


Phoebe Deaconess Home. 

1923 Turner St. 

Altoona: 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

906 Chestnut Ave. 

Ambler: 

John C. Mercer Home. 

Bellevue: 

Beulah Home. 

136 Sheridan Ave. 

Ben Avon: 

Home for Widows and Orphans of Odd Fel¬ 
lows. 

6627 Brighton Road. 


Reformed Church in the 
United States. 

Salvation Army. 


Tnistees of.’ Mrs. Anne Jane 
Mercer Endowment. 

Private organization. 


Independent Order of Odd 
Fellows. 




T3 

© 

M 

Cfl 



o 

© 

I inmates received 

during year. 



© 

* 

© 





Class of inmates received. 

T3 

© 

a 

3 

© 

© 

O 

C3 

t-. 

fl 

© 

O 

-4-3 

Si 

U. 

& 

© 

M 

o3 

-t-3 

’© 

© 

© 

i-H 

to 

a 

8 

h 

& 

smployees at c 

year. 





s- 

c3 

© 

r" 

3 

o 

3 

< 

o 

a 

< 

© 

U 

o 

o 

O 

2 

‘3 

Pk 

Total. 

Male. 

a 

© 

Masons and their families. 

1895 



No. 

32 

28 

16 

12 

Homeless unemployed men... 

1904 



0) 

2 

53 

53 








Indigent widows and unmar¬ 
ried women. 

1906 

$200 


No. 

2 

7 


7 






W ay ward and temporarily de¬ 
pendent girls. 

Indigent aged persons_ 

1896 


$2.25 

No. 

4 

72 


72 

1885 


Yes. 


52 

25 

27 

Erring women.. 

1906 



Yes. 


34 


34 

Dependent children and 
homeless men and women. 
Homeless aged indigent 
women. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 

1860 

1873 

500 

300 

2.00 

Yes. 

No. 

6 

6 

23 

3 

12 

11 

3 

1904 


(») 

Yes. 

6 

164 

164 


1901 



2 

30 


30 

fants. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 

Odd Fellows, their families, 

1905 



0) 

No. 

3 

41 

41 

1906 


* 12.00 

7 

21 

11 

10 

and Rebekahs. 







Odd Fellows, their families, 
and Rebekahs. 

1902 


* 12.00 

No. 

9 

7 

5 

2 







Masons, Eastern Stars, and 

1910 

<•) 


No. 

15 

18 

11 

7 

their families. 







Erring girls and fallen women. 

Fallen women and their in- 

1909 



No. 

4 

142 


142 

1S96 

25 


Yes. 

3 

70 


70 

fants. 

Erring women and delinquent 
girls. 

Delinquent or fallen girls. 

1902 


No. 


SO 


80 

1908 


2.50 

Yes. 

4 

56 

16 

40 

Aged men and women. 

1897 


Yes. 

5 

( 3 ) 

12 

( 3 ) 

6 

( 3 ) 

6 

Odd Fellows, their families, 

1883 


6 2.50 

No. 

5 

and Rebekahs. 

Aged men aiid women. 

1887 


( 7 ) 

3.50 

No. 

9 

32 

10 

22 

Homeless unemployed men... 

F.allen or unprotected girls... 

Homeless unemployed men... 

Fallen women and their chil- 

1908 


Yes. 

10 

40,620 

13 

40,620 

1909 


1.25 

No. 

13 

1903 


0) 

Yes. 

10 

131 

131 

1897 



4 

31 

12 

19 

dren. 





Veterans. 

1894 



Yes. 

26 

62 

62 


Crippled and dependent chil¬ 
dren, disabled ministers, 
and aged persons. 

Aged persons and crippled 
children. 

1908 



Yes. 

11 

( 3 ) 

5 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

5 

1904 

300 


Yes. 

2 






Homeless unemployed men.. 

Aged Presbyterian clergy¬ 
men and their wives. 

1909 



0) 

No. 

4 

160 

160 


1886 



4 

3 

2 

1 






Homeless missionaries and 

1899 


> 3.50 

No. 

7 

108 

20 

88 

working girls. 

Widows and orphans of Odd 
Fellows. 


10 

1890 


No. 

25 

19 

6 




i Per month; no weekly charge. 
* All property owned. 


1 No rule against admission. 

2 Equipment. 

3 Not reported. 






























































































































GENERAL TABLES 


237 


OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


INMATES PRESENT AT CLOSE OF YEAR. 


Adults. 


o 


c3 

a 


119 

8 

8 

10 

130 

65 

25 

22 

30 

12 

6 

6 

3 
15 
45 

( 3 ) 

30 

10 

104 

18 

75 

210 

9 

20 

6 

134 

4 

8 

19 

4 

19 


73 


14 


30 


Children. 


RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 


Female. 

Permanently 

dependent. 

Temporarily 

dependent. 

Wav ward or 
delinquent. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Orphan or de¬ 

pendent. 

Received with 

parent. 

Delinquent. 

49 

119 



49 

27 

22 

49 





8 








8 

8 









10 


10 








57 

130 









65 



65 







11 

25 



50 

27 

23 

50 



22 

22 









).... 


30 








12 



12 

3 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


3 




6 



• 



2 

6 



58 

30 

28 

58 



l 2 

3 



71 

40 

31 

71 



4 

15 



97 

47 

50 

97 



45 



45 

10 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

10 



c 3 ) 



c) 

( a ) 

( 3 ) 

( s ) 

( 3 > 







30 



30 

58 


58 

8 


50 

10 


10 


5 

3 

2 


5 


r 37 

104 









2 6 

18 



19 

11 

8 

19 



3 55 

75 









3 .... 


210 








9 



9 







3 .... 


20 








6 



6 

6 

4 

2 

6 



4 ... . 

134 









1 3 

4 



35 

15 

20 

32 

3 


1 7 

8 









3 .... 


19 








3 1 

4 


.... 







1 18 

19 



1 


1 

1 







74 

46 

28 

74 














Total. 


$40,070 
3,462 

4,700 

2,000 
5,375 
10,740 
6,735 

7.547 
12,228 

2,411 

5,655 

14,242 

15,503 

40,550 

2,140 

4,856 

22,000 

1,000 

( 3 ) 

9,486 
15,402 
9,854 
3,072 
14,053 

3.548 

28,900 

10,184 
2,033 
6,302 
6,000 
5,553 
6,581 


Derived from— 


Appro¬ 

pri¬ 

ations. 


$1,098 


Dona¬ 

tions. 


$40,070 


5,375 
1,509 
3,697 
2,826 


1,985 


90 

3,000 

4,000 


5,252 


16,000 


13,330 

1,746 

500 

1,600 

2 Si) 


776 
( 3 ) 
9,301 


5,099 

273 


3,396 


10,160 
2,033 


Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 


$1,400 

725 


2,550 
1,100 


Other 

sources. 


$3,462 
3,300 
1,275 


8,133 
488 
3,621 
12,228 


426 


912 

834 

50 


851 


224 


185 

10,000 

4,755 

205 


24 


1,803 


6,581' 


5,655 


12,923 

40,000 

450 

725 

18,000 


( 8 ) 


150 


2,594 

14,053 

152 

12,900 


6,302 

6,000 

3,750 


PAYMENTS DURING 

YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. . 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

$38,905 

$38,905 


$371,000 

$225,000 

$146,000 

73 

3,516 

3,516 


2 891 

2 891 


74 

3,526 

2,768 

$758 

85,000 

48,000 

37,000 

75 

2 000 

2 000 


6,000 

6,000 


76 

15,350 

5,350 

10,000 

50,000 

50,000 


77 

4 976 

4,976 


40,000 

40,000 


78 

5,774 

5,004 

770 

50,000 

50,000 


79 

6,189 

5,639 

550 

78,736 

28,736 

50,000 

80 

12 153 

12,153 


36,851 

36,851 


81 

2,611 

2,145 

466 

10,000 

10,000 


82 

4 432 

4 432 


2 672 

2 672 


83 

11 809 

11 809 


65,000 

65,000 


1 

12,905 

10,941 

1,964 

59,282 

59,282 


2 

40,000 

30,000 

10,000 

145,604 

111,870 

33,734 

3 

2,140 

1,690 

450 

20,000 

20,000 


4 

4,676 

4,207 

469 

50,000 

50,000 


1 

18,000 

17,000 

1,000 

25,000 

25,000 


2 

2,066 

1,146 

920 

4,400 

4,400 


3 

o 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

150,000 

150,000 


4 

9,714 

8,571 

1,143 

( 3 ) 

(*) 

(*) 

5 

26,000 

12,000 

14,000 

45,000 

35,000 

10,000 

6 

11,319 

10,935 

384 

10,226 

10,226 


7 

2,798 

2,553 

245 

2 500 

2 500 


S 

13 284 

13 284 


2 2,069 

2 2,069 


9 

3 394 

3 394 


5,000 

5,000 


10 

25 626 

25 626 


50,000 

50,000 


11 

9,788 

6,878 

2,910 

30,000 

30,000 


1 

11,350 

1,850 

9,500 

6,360 

6,000 

360 

2 

6 229 

6 229 


2 1,479 

2 1,479 


3 

5,000 

5,000 

. 

144,000 

30,000 

114,000 

4 

5 156 

5 156 





5 

12,516 

11,062 

1,454 

46,614 

35,000 

11,614 

6 


6 For boarders. 
i According to ability to pay 


8 Includes report of Industrial Farm. 

9 Average of maximum and minimum amounts. 
















































































































































































































































238 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table III.—HOMES FOR THE CARE OF ADULTS 


2 

a 

0 

s 

a 


o 


0 


1 

M 


7 


8 


9 


10 

11 


12 


13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 
21 

22 

23 

24 

25 

26 

27 


28 


29 

30 

31 

32 

33 

34 

35 

36 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


Supervised or conducted 
by— 


PENNSYLVANIA—Continued. 


Bethlehem: 

Widows’ House of the Moravian Church. 
34 Church St. 


Moravian Church 


Braddock: 

Ladies of the G. A. R. Home. 
Woodstock Ave. 


Ladies of the G. A. R. of 
Pennsylvania. 


Brookville: 

Pennsylvania Memorial Home 


Woman’s Relief Corps, De¬ 
partment of Pennsylvania. 


Carlisle: 

Lydia Baird Home. 

East High St. 

Cheltenham : 

Improved Order of Red Men’s Home. 


Dravosburg: 

Frances Campbell Hamilton Home for the 
Aged. 

Maple Ave. 

Easton: 

Home for Aged and Infirm Women. 

1022 Northampton St. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

Lehigh and Sitgrave Sts. 

Erie: 

Florence Crittenton Home. 

501 Holland St. 

Lutheran Home for the Aged. 

2201 Sassafras St. 

Pennsylvania Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Home... 
Third and Ash Sts. 

St. Mary’s Home. 

Ash and Twenty-sixth Sts. 

Fairoaks: 

German Protestant Home for the Aged. 

Frederick: 

Mennonite Home for the Aged. 

Grove City: 

Odd Fellows’ Home for Aged and Infirm.... 
Harmony: 

Pythian Home of Pennsylvania. 


Private organization 


Twenty-six tribes of the Or¬ 
der of Red Men of Penn¬ 
sylvania. 

Methodist Episcopal Church. 


Private corporation 
Salvation Army.... 


National Florence Critten¬ 
ton Mission. 

General Council of the Lu¬ 
theran Church. 

State of Pennsylvania.. 

Sisters of St. Joseph.. 


Private corporation. 

Mennonite Church. 

Independent Order of Odd 
Fellows. 

Knights of Pythias. 


Harrisburg: 

Florence Crittenton Home. 

2410 North Sixth St. 

Home for the Friendless. 

Fifth and Muench Sts. 

Messiah Rescue Benevolent Home 
1185 Bailey St. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 
Zeigler and Cherry Aves. 
Hatboro: 

Orange Home. 


National Florence Critten¬ 
ton Mission. 

Private corporation (Prot¬ 
estant churches). 

Brethren in Christ. 

Salvation Army. 


Loyal Orange Institution in 
the United States. 


Hazleton: 

United Charities Home.. 

175 Wyoming St. 

Kennett Square: 

Friends’ Boarding Home. 

State St. 

Lancaster: 

Ann C. Witmer Home.. 

812 Columbia Ave. 

Bishop Bowman Church Home. 

133 East Orange St. 

Henry G. Long Asylum. 

Marietta and West End Aves. 

Lebanon: 

Home for Widows and Single Women 
North Tenth St. 

Lititz: 

United Zion Home and Hospital. 


United Charities of Hazleton. 


Society of Friends. 


Private corporation.. 

Private corporation (Epis¬ 
copal). 

Private organization. 


Private corporation 


Private corporation 


McKeesport: 

St. Barnabas Free Home. 


Salvation Army Industrial Home 
103 Fifth Ave. 


Private corporation (Epis¬ 
copal). 

Salvation Army. 


Class of inmates received. 


Moravian ministers’ and mis¬ 
sionaries’ widows and sin¬ 
gle daughters, and women 
ex-teachers in Moravian 
schools. 

Mothers, sisters, wives, and 
daughters of Civil War vet¬ 
erans. 

Veterans, their mothers, sis¬ 
ters, daughters, wives, and 
widows. 

Self-supporting women over 
60. 

Aged members of the tribes.. 


Aged and homeless members 
of the church. 


Impoverished aged women... 
Homeless unemployed men.. 


Fallen women and their chil¬ 
dren. 

Homeless aged persons. 

Veterans. 

Aged men and women.. 


Aged men and women. 

Aged men and women. 

Aged Odd Fellows and their 
wives. 

Aged Knights of Pythias, 
their wives and widows. 

Fallen women and their chil¬ 
dren. 

Homeless women and needy 
girls. 

Aged men and women. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 


Aged Orangemen in the 
United States and Protes¬ 
tant orphan children. 

Homeless men and women, 
dependent and delinquent 
children. 

Homeless aged Friends.. 


Aged and infirm women. 

Destitute aged members of 
the church. 

Indigent aged women, single 
or widowed. 

Impoverished aged women, 
single or widowed. 

Homeless, aged, and indigent 
persons. 

Convalescent and incurable 
men and boys. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 


Year founded. 

Amount of entrance fee asked. 

Amount asked per week. 

Colored persons received. 

Paid employees at close of 

year. 

INMATES RECEIVED 
DURING YEAR. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

1768 



No. 

4 




1890 



Yes. 

10 

22 


22 

1890 



Yes. 

10 

17 

3 

14 

1887 



No. 

1 




1889 



No. 

3 

3 

3 


1908 

$250 


No. 

4 

23 

5 

18 

1891 

2 400 


No. 

6 

2 


2 

1910 



(•) 

5 

80 

80 


1896 



Yes. 

1 

22 


22 

1906 

500 


No. 

5 

5 

2 

3 

1885 



Yes. 

175 

279 

279 


1882 

500 

6 $4.00 

No. 

4 

22 

10 

12 

1891 

400 


No. 

( 6 ) 

4 

2 

2 

1896 

MOO 


No. 

2 

2 

1 

1 

1901 



No. 

6 

12 

9 

3 

1903 



No. 

6 

5 

4 

1 

1894 



No. 

1 

35 


35 

1S66 

300 


No. 

8 

8 


8 

1896 



No. 

6 

1 

i 


1908 



(•) 

5 

87 

87 


1901 



No. 

10 

10 

6 

4 

1902 


( s ) 

(10) 

6 

118 

57 

61 

1898 

6 63 

6 3.25 

No. 

5 




1889 

( 6 ) 


( 6 ) 

(•) 

( 6 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 6 ) 

1859 



No. 

1 




1900 



No. 

8 

4 


4 

18S3 

250 


No. 

3 

1 


i 

1904 


2.50 

No. 

10 

27 

17 

10 

1900 

( 5 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 5 ) 

(*) 

( 6 ) 

1907 



( 3 ) 

4 

96 

96 








1 Includes $3,537 assessments from twenty-six tribes. 

2 And all property owned. 

•No rule against admission. 


4 Equipment. 

6 Not reported. 

6 Average of maximum and minimum amounts. 
































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


239 


OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


INMATES PRESENT AT CLOSE OF YEAR. 


Adults. 

Children. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Permanently 

dependent. 

Temporarily 

dependent. 

Wayward or 
delinquent. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Orphan or de¬ 

pendent. 

Received with 

parent. 

Delinquent. 

22 


22 

22 









95 


95 

95 









43 

5 

38 

43 









10 


10 

10 









11 

11 


11 









20 

4 

16 

20 









21 


21 

21 









10 

10 



10 








9 


9 



9 

2 


2 


2 


29 

10 

19 

29 



1 

C) 

( 6 > 


1 


452 

452 


452 







47 

22 

25 

41 

3 

3 







36 

( 5 ) 

( 5 ) 

36 









10 

5 

5 

10 









35 

31 

4 

35 









19 

16 

3 

19 









15 


15 


9 

6 







21 


21 

21 



5 


5 

5 



28 

9 

19 

28 








• 

11 

11 



11 








7 

6 

1 

7 



50 

28 

22 

50 



2 


2 


2 


14 

10 

4 

14 



15 

2 

13 

15 









C) 

( 5 ) 

o 

( 6 ) 

c) 

( 5 > 

( 6 ) 

o 

c) 

c) 


( 5 ) 

3 


3 

3 









40 


40 

40 









18 

- 

18 

18 









60 

27 

33 

60 









< 6 ) 

« 

( 5 ) 

<») 

<*> 

( 6 ) 

o 

<*) 

( 6 ) 

o 

(*) 

C 6 ) 

13 

13 



13 













1 







RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 



Derived from— 

Total. 

Appro- 

Dona- 

Care of 

Other 


pri- 

ations. 

tions. 

in¬ 

mates. 

sources. 

$712 




$712 

16,060 

$9,000 

$2,326 


4,734 

9,970 

7,032 

2,938 



205 


10 


195 

4,257 


1 3,777 


480 

4,000 


4,000 



3,860 

2,000 

952 

$54 

854 

3,488 




3,488 

2,651 


1,847 

583 

221 

3,591 


977 

2,500 

114 

115,000 

115,000 




5,000 

300 

2,000 

2,700 

4,562 

2,000 

952 

550 

1,060 

2,394 


958 

o 

8 1,436 

11,088 


11,088 



6,251 


6,251 



1,049 

500 

424 

125 


4,02 S 

2,000 

1,123 


905 

1,324 


1,324 



2,942 




2,942 

24,400 


24,400 


6,392 

2,500 

3,183 

231 

478 

4,320 


498 

2,562 

1,260 

( 6 ) 

« 

C) 

( 5 ) 

(*> 

933 


504 


429 

14,750 




14,750 

» 

2,950 

2,500 



450 

6,548 

1,000 

1,159 

4,325 

64 

( 6 ) 

( s ) 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

6,359 




6,359 

• 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

$676 

$676 


$39,196 

$25,000 

$14,196 

7 

16,435 

14,055 

$2,380 

95,000 

95,000 


8 

10,218 

8,592 

1,626 

30,500 

30,500 


9 

233 

233 


5,000 

5,000 


10 

4,067 

2,882 

1,185 

19,400 

12,000 

7,400 

11 

5,000 

1,000 

4,000 

35,000 

35,000 


12 

4,076 

4,076 


27,100 

17,100 

10,000 

13 

5,441 

5,441 


4 1,092 

4 1,092 


14 

2,651 

2,651 


13,000 

13,000 


15 

4,470 

4,470 


22,500 

20,000 

2,500 

16 

97,780 

97,780 


675,000 

675,000 


17 

5,000 

5,000 


« 

81,000 

( 6 ) 

18 

5,411 

5,411 


61,000 

55,000 

6,000 

19 

1,770 

1,703 

67 

7,200 

5,000 

2,200 

20 

10,044 

8,944 

1,100 

no , ooo 

105,000 

5,000 

21 

6,058 

6,058 


70,550 

70,550 


22 

1,024 

1,024 


4,600 

4,600 


23 

24,262 

4,262 

20,000 

90,976 

65,000 

25,976 

24 

1,627 

1,627 


15,000 

15,000 


25 

8,956 

4,956 


4 1,340 

4 1,340 


26 

13,200 

12,000 

1,200 

70,000 

70,000 


27 

6,228 

6,228 


8,485 

5,000 

3,485 

28 

3,907 

3,845 

62 

7,000 

7,000 


29 

( s ) 


<») 

¥>) 

( 6 ) 

c) 

30 

861 

861 


21,290 

12,000 

9,290 

31 

12,958 

6,396 

6,562 

420,000 

125,000 

295,000 

32 

3,000 

3,000 


11,000 

10,000 

1,000 

33 

7,596 

7,596 


35,500 

35,500 


34 


( 5 ) 

( 6 ) 

(?) 

(»> 

( 6 ) 

35 

6, 789 

6,789 


4 620 

4 620 


36 







i Included in 11 other sources.” 
* Includes “care of inmates.” 


® According to ability to pay. 
*o Indeterminate. 



















































































































































































240 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table III.—HOMES FOR THE CARE OF ADULTS 


B 

a 

§ 

§ 


37 

38 

39 

40 

41 

42 

43 

44 

45 

46 

47 


48 

49 

50 

51 

52 

53 

54 

55 

56 

57 

58 

59 

60 
61 
62 

63 

64 

65 

66 

67 

68 

69 

70 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


Supervised or conducted 
by— 


Class of inmates received. 


PENNSYLVANIA—Continued. 


Mars: 

St. John’s Lutheran Home. 

Martinsburg: 

Morrison Cove Home for Aged and Infirm... 
Meadville: 

Children’s Aid Society and Home for the 
Aged. 

Mechanicsburg: 

Colestock Old People’s Home. 

Nazareth: 

Moravian Missionary Home. 

East Center St. 

Neffsvtlle: 

Brethren Home. 

New Castle: 

Almira Home for Aged Women. 

Pittsburg St. 

Newtown: 

Friends’ Boarding Home. 

Congress St. and Center Ave. 
Norristown: 

Abington Friends’ Home. 

Swede and Powell Sts. 

Aged Woman’s Home of Montgomery 
County. 

Makley and Brown Sts. 

St. Joseph’s Protectory. 


Oakboiirne: 

James C. Smith Memorial Home.. 

Pennsylvania Epileptic Hospital and Colony 
Farm. 

Philadelphia: 

Baptist Home of Philadelphia.,_ 

Seventeenth and Norris Sts. 

Door of Blessing. 

648 North Thirty-third St. (West Phila¬ 
delphia). 

Door of Hope. 

1736 North Twenty-second St. 

Drexmor. 

507 South Ninth St. 

Evangelical Home for the Aged. 

Old York Road and Huntington Park 
Ave. 

Florence Crittenton Home. 

139 Queen Lane (Germantown). 
Franklin Home for the Reformation of Ine¬ 
briates. 

911 Locust St. 

Galilee Mission. 

823 Vine St. 

German Baptist Home for the Aged. 

7023 Old Second St. Pike. 

Hayes Mechanics Home. 

Belmont and Lankenau Aves. 

Home for Aged and Infirm Colored Persons. 
4400 Girard Ave. 

Home for Aged and Infirm Israelites. 

York Road and Olney Ave. 

Home for Aged Couples. 

1723 Francis St. 

Home for Retired Music Teachers. 

101 West Johnson St. (Germantown). 

Home for the Aged. 

Fifty-third St. and Chester Ave. (West 
Philadelphia). 

Home for the Aged. 

North Eighteenth St. 

Home for the Aged. 

602 Church Lane (Germantown). 

Home for the Aged. 

1809 Mount Vernon St. 

Home for the Homeless. 

1327 Fitzwater St. 

Home for Veterans of the G. A. R. and their 
wives. 

Sixty-fifth and Vine Sts. 

Home of Industry for Discharged Prisoners.. 
Seventy-third St. and Paschal Ave. 
(West Philadelphia). 


Joint Synod of Ohio and 
Other States. 

Church of the Brethren. 

Children’s Aid Society. 

United Brethren in Christ... 
Moravian Church. 

Church of the Brethren. 

Private corporation. 

Society of Friends. 

Society of Friends. 

Private corporation. 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd. 

Protestant Episcopal City 
Mission. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation (Baptist) 
Private organization. 

Private corporation. 

Brothers of the Christian 
Schools. 

Private corporation. 

National Florence Critten¬ 
ton Mission. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation (Epis¬ 
copal). 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Jewish Hospital Association 
of Philadelphia. 

Private corporation. 

Private organization. 

Little Sisters of the Poor.... 

Little Sisters of the Poor.... 

Little Sisters of the Poor.... 

Private corporation. 

Protestant Episcopal Church 

Ladies of the G. A. R. of 
Philadelphia. 

Private corporation. 


Homeless aged persons 


Aged men and women. 

Aged men and women, and 
dependent children. 

Aged men and women. 

Missionaries on furlough. 


Homeless aged persons 
Homeless women. 


Elderly members of the So¬ 
ciety of Friends. 

Aged members of the Society 
of Friends. 

Aged women, single or wid¬ 
owed. 

Delinquent and dependent 
children, and aged women 
boarders. 

Convalescent women. 

Epileptics who are not insane. 


Aged Baptist women. 

Discharged female prisoners 
and their children. 

Fallen girls. 

Graduates of St. Francis In¬ 
dustrial School, and work¬ 
ingmen. 

Homeless aged men and 
women. 

Homeless girls, fallen women 
and their infants. 

Inebriates. 

Homeless men. 

Aged men and women. 

Aged mechanics. 

Aged men and women. 

Aged and infirm Israelites.... 

Indigent aged couples. 

Aged infirm music teachers.. 

Indigent aged persons. 


Indigent aged persons. 

Destitute aged persons. 

Homeless men aijd women... 

Homeless women and chil¬ 
dren and dependent girls. 

Civil W ar veterans, their 
wives, widows, mothers, 
and sisters. 

Discharged prisoners. 


Year founded. 

Amount of entrance fee asked. 

Amount asked per week. 

Colored persons received. 

Paid employees at close of 

year. 

INMATES RECEIVED 
DURING YEAR. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

1893 

$250 

$3.00 

No. 

2 




1891 

2.50 

No. 

4 

6 


6 

1906 

2 500 

3 2.00 

No. 

3 

21 

8 

13 

1887 

200 


( 4 ) 

3 

1 


1 

1870 


No. 


6 

2 

4 

1897 


2.00 

No. 

11 

16 

6 

10 

1S93 

300 


No. 


4 


4 

1897 

50 

4.00 

No. 

6 

1 


1 

1897 


2.00 

No. 

5 

2 


2 

1894 

5 250 


No. 

6 

1 


1 

1886 

5 

(«) 

No. 

2 

59 


59 

1896 



No. 

8 

380 


380 

1896 


2 3.62 

Yes. 

18 

20 

9 

11 

1869 

8 275 


No. 

14 

6 


6 

1900 



Yes. 

2 

39 

3 

36 

1S94 



No. 

2 

16 


16 

1892 


i 2.25 

No. 

7 

398 

398 


1888 

( 6 ) 


No. 

4 

3 

1 

2 

1894 



No. 

3 

70 


70 

1872 


7.00 

No. 

8 

228 

228 


1S97 


( 8 ) 

No. 

10 

(4) 

( 4 ) 


1897 

8 400 

No. 

6 

3 

3 

1886 

«325 


No. 

12 

10 

10 


1864 

200 


Yes. 

( 4 ) 

18 

5 

13 

1865 



No. 

6 

7 

5 

2 

1876 

» 500 


No. 

8 

4 

2 

2 

1906 

200 


No. 

4 

3 


3 

1902 



Yes. 


82 

40 

42 

1S69 



Yes. 


50 

32 

18 

18S0 



Yes. 


1874 

s 400 


No. 

5 

2 


2 

1868 


1.50 

Yes. 

3 

76 

-•_ 

76 

1S94 



No. 

8 

20 

7 

13 

1889 



No. 

2 

73 

73 








1 Includes report of St. John’s Lutheran orphanage. 
1 For adults. 

3 For children 


1 Not reported. 

8 And all property owned. 

8 According to ability to pay. 
























































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


241 


OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


INMATES PRESENT AT CLOSE OF YEAR. 


RECEIPTS 

DURING 

YEAR. 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Adults. 

Children. 

Total. 

Derived from— 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

Total. 

'cS 

a 

Female. 

Permanently 

dependent. 

Temporarily 

dependent. 

I Wayward or 

| delinquent. 

C3 

O 

6 

C3 

a 

Female. 

Orphan or de¬ 

pendent. 

Received with 

parent. 

Delinquent. 

Appro¬ 

pri¬ 

ations. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources. 

21 

10 

11 

21 









1 $5,866 

S151 

$509 

$710 

$4 496 

1 $9 582 

$9 0S6 

$496 

1 S85 500 

<75 000 

$10,500 

37 

23 

10 

13 

23 









6,066 

33 

1,170 

4 863 

5 993 

1,982 

4,011 

13,600 

13 600 

38 

10 

1 

9 

10 



13 

(<) 

(<) 

13 



2,524 

1,588 

416 

416 

104 

3,853 

3,853 

26,212 

26,212 


39 

7 

2 

5 

7 







1,644 

516 


1 128 

1 041 

846 

195 

10 300 

10 000 

300 

40 

6 

2 

4 


6 








( 4 ) 


(<) 


(4) 


(4) 

(i) 

( 4 ) 

(i) 

(4) 

41 

45 

17 

28 

40 

5 








4,726 


3,286 

v / 

1,440 

\ / 

52,700 

4,700 

48,000 

60,200 

50,000 

10,200 

42 

32 


32 


32 








6,655 

3,750 

434 

2,471 

6,489 

6,489 

50,000 

50,000 

43 

23 

1 

22 

23 









6,160 

4,276 


1,884 

6,134 

6,134 


43,300 

30,000 

13,300 

44 

25 

2 

23 

25 









10,088 


(*> 


(4) 

9,647 

7,649 

1,998 

20,000 

20,000 

45 

12 


12 

12 









11,480 


11,486 

9,431 

9,431 

182,000 

50,000 

132,000 

46 

52 


52 

10 

42 


107 


107 

51 

22 

34 

20,007 


2,901 

10,172 

6,934 

21,523 

18,513 

3,010 

200,000 

200,000 

47 

9 


9 


9 








8,000 


8,000 

8,000 

8,000 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


43 

51 

23 

28 

51 



27 

9 

18 

27 



17,660 

3,371 

2,443 

4,220 

7,626 

17,290 

17,290 


312,458 

115,806 

196,652 

49 

80 


80 

80 









17,015 

6,843 

10,172 

18,955 

16,872 

2,083 

220,000 

45,000 

175,000 

50 

1 


1 


1 


4 

3 

1 


4 


1,737 


1,737 



1,488 

1,488 

51 

8 


8 



8 







2,800 


2,800 



2,600 

2,600 


6,000 

6,000 


52 

36 

36 



36 








8,978 


4,644 

4,334 


8,978 

8,978 


40,000 

40,000 


53 

37 

16 

21 

37 









5,616 

1,000 

1,125 

3,169 

322 

6,016 

5,280 

736 

45,158 

43,158 

2,000 

54 

13 


13 



13 

19 

9 

10 

14 

5 


2,563 

1,989 

389 

185 

2,563 

2,563 


14,000 

14,000 

55 

21 

21 



21 








9,223 


3,540 

3,293 

2,390 

8,196 

8,196 


50,800 

30,000 

20,800 

56 

(4) 

(4) 


( 4 ) 

c) 

<<) 







3,500 


1,500 

2,000 

3,500 

3,500 


50,000 

50,000 

57 

48 

33 

15 

48 







8,793 


3,724 

963 

4,106 

7,533 

7,533 


53,000 

53,000 


58 

66 

66 


66 









15,105 


1,304 

2,000 

11,801 

18,054 

18,054 


423,000 

200,000 

223,000 

59 

140 

30 

110 

140 









28,027 


6,644 

3,700 

17,683 

24,484 

24,484 


22,009 

22,009 

60 

41 

19 

22 

41 









( 10 ) 

(10) 

( 10 ) 

(10) 

(i°) 

( 10 ) 

( 10 ) 

( 10 ) 

(i°) 

( 10 ) 

( 10 ) 

61 

28 

12 

16 

28 









10,110 

8,175 

1,935 

12,783 

11,783 

1,000 

56,000 

15,000 

41,000 

62 

7 


7 

7 









612 



612 

4,149 

4,012 

137 

25,000 

25,000 

63 

213 

94 

119 

213 









25,594 


( 4 ) 


( 4 ) 

11,144 

11,144 


150,000 

150,000 


64 

300 

127 

173 

300 









16,445 


( 4 ) 


( 4 ) 

16,534 

16,534 


( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


65 

300 

148 

152 

300 









16,274 


15,811 


463 

12,386 

12,386 


200,000 

200,000 


66 

20 

1 

19 

20 









6,005 

3,187 

532 


2,286 

3,812 

3,812 


12,000 

12,000 


67 

15 


15 

8 

4 

3 

5 


5 

3 

2 


3,167 

1,570 

125 

1,472 

3,142 

3,142 


35,000 

15,000 

20,000 

68 

61 

20 

41 

61 









13,491 

9,000 

4,491 



14,034 

13,534 

500 

29,000 

29,000 

69 

14 

14 


14 









10,432 

2,500 

1,607 


6,325 

11,109 

11,109 


34,380 

20,000 

14,380 

70 



















7 Average. 10 Included in report of Jewish Hospital. 

8 Average of maximum and minimum amounts. 11 For each couple. 

9 For bed and meal, 15 cents. 


44153°—14 


16 







































































































































































































242 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table III.—HOMES FOR THE CARE OF ADULTS 


a 

§ 


IS 

B 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


Supervised or conducted 
by— 


Class of inmates received. 


■a 

'O 

0 

0 

a 

u, 


I 

l-l 


PENNSYLVANIA—Continued. 


71 

72 

73 

74 

75 

76 

77 

78 

79 

80 
81 
82 

83 

84 

85 

86 


Philadelphia— Contin ued. 

House of Industry. 

716 Catherine St. 

House of Rest for the Aged. 

5919 Wayne Ave. (Germantown). 

House of the Good Shepherd. 

Chew and Penn Sts. (Germantown). 

House of the Good Shepherd. 

Fairmont Ave. and Thirty-fifth St. 
Indigent Widows’ and Single Women’s 
Home. 

3615 Chestnut St. 

Jewish Sheltering Home. 

315 South Third St. 

Leamy Home. 

Roumfort Ave. and Boyer St. (Mount 
Airy). 

Lucien Moss Home for Incurables of Jewish 
Faith. 

York Road and Olney Ave. 

Lutheran Orphans’ Home and Asylum. 

6950 Germantown Ave. 

Magdalen Society of Philadelphia. 

213 North Twenty-first St. 

Mary J. Drexel Home. 

2100 South College Ave. 

Masonic Home of Pennsylvania. 

3333 North Broad St. 

Men’s Friendly Inn. 

246 South Ninth St. 

Messiah Universalist Home. 

Old York Road and Ruscomb St. 
Methodist Episcopal Home for the Aged 
Belmont and Edgely Aves. (West Phila¬ 
delphia). 

Midnight Mission. 

129 East Walnut Lane and 919 Locust St. 


Private corporation. 

Private corporation (Epis¬ 
copal). 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd. 
Sisters of the Good Shepherd. 
Private corporation. 


Private association. 

Private organization (Epis¬ 
copal). 

Jewish Hospital Association 
of Philadelphia. 

Ministerium of Pennsyl¬ 
vania. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Masonic Grand Lodge of 
Pennsylvania. 

Private individual. 

Private corporation (Uni¬ 
versalist). 

Methodist Episcopal Church 


Private corporation 


Homeless women and chil¬ 
dren. 

Aged Episcopalian women... 

Fallen women and unpro¬ 
tected young girls. 

Fallen women and wayward 
girls. 

Indigent aged women. 


Homeless and aged men and 
women. 

Indigent widows and single 
women of the church. 

Tubercular and other incur¬ 
able diseases. 

Impoverished aged persons 
and destitute orphans. 

Fallen girls.. 

Aged Germans or German 
Americans. 

Aged masons. 

Homeless needy men. 

Aged men and women. 

Homeless aged men and 
women. 

Fallen women and their in¬ 
fants. 


1848 

1890 

1892 

1850 

1817 

1890 

1902 

1865 

1859 

1800 

1888 

1S85 

1895 

1900 

1865 

1868 


87 

88 

89 

90 

91 

92 

93 

94 

95 

96 

97 

98 

99 
100 

101 

102 

103 

104 

105 


Nazarene Home for the Aged. 

2032 Columbia Ave. 

Odd Fellows’ Home of Pennsylvania. 

Seventeenth and Tioga Sts. 

Old Ladies’ Home of Philadelphia. 

State Road (Wissinoming). 

Old Man’s Home of Philadelphia. 

Thirty-ninth and Baring Sts. 

Old St. Paul’s Club. 

411 Spruce St. 

Penn Asylum for Indigent Widows and 
Single Women. 

Belgrade St. and East Susquehanna Ave. 
Philadelphia German Protestant Home for 
the Aged. 

Lawndale. 

Philadelphia Home for Incurables. 

Forty-eighth St. and Woodland Ave. 
Philadelphia Quarterly Meetings’ Boarding 
House. 

6300 Greene St. 

Philadelphia Rescue Home. 

1733 North Front St., and 8 Palmer St. 
Presbyterian Home for Aged Couples and 
Aged Men. 

Bala P. O. 

Presbyterian Home for Widows and Single 
Women. 

Fifty-eighth St. and Greenway Ave. 

Rebecca Gratz House. 

719 North Sixth St. 

Rebekah Home of Pennsylvania. 

Seventeenth St. and Allegheny Ave. 

Rosine Home. 

3256 Germantown Ave. 

Roxborough Home for Indigent Women.... 
Leverington and Lawton Aves. (Rox¬ 
borough). 

St. Ann’s Widows’ Asylum... 

212 North Franklin St. 

St. Mark’s Home for Aged and Infirm .. 
Women. 

1919 Lombard St. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

2132 Market St. 


Private corporation. 

Independent Order of Odd 
Fellows. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Portestant Episcopal City 
Mission. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Society of Friends. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation (Pres¬ 
byterian). 

Private corporation (Pres¬ 
byterian). 

Private organization. 

Independent Order of Odd 
Fellows. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Sisters of St. Joseph. 

St. Mark’s Episcopal Church. 

Salvation Army. 


Aged men and women. 

Aged Odd Fellows. 

Indigent women, single or 
widowed. 

Homeless aged men. 

Inebriates. 

Needy gentlewomen. 


Needy aged persons 


Incurables 14 . 

Aged members of the Society 
of Friends. 

Homeless unemployed men 
and boys. 

Aged couples and men.. 


Impoverished aged women... 


Jewish working girls. 

Wives and widows of Odd 
Fellows, and aged Rebek- 
ahs. 

Fallen girls and their infants. 
Indigent women. 


Aged women, single or wid¬ 
owed. 

Aged and infirm women. 


Homeless unemployed men.. 


1902 

1875 

1875 

1864 

1910 

1850 

1890 

1877 

1897 

1892 

1885 

1872 

1907 

1894 

1847 

1887 

1849 

1889 

1901 


Amount of entrance fee asked. 

Amount asked per week. 

Colored persons received. 

Paid employees at close of 

year. 



Yes. 

5 

$300 


No. 

2 


( 2 ) 

( 8 ) 

6 


$3.00 

No. 

.... 

4 250 


No. 

22 



0) 

14 



No. 

17 



No. 

4 

6 210 


( 7 ) 

23 



No. 

6 

300 


No. 

24 

( 9 ) 


No. 

14 


2.50 

No. 

15 

(13) 


No. 

4 

<600 


No. 

15 



No. 

5 

300 


No. 

5 



No. 

15 

1,450 


No. 

16 

4 325 


No. 

41 



No. 


4 350 


No. 

12 

500 


No. 

7 

250 

4 6.50 

Yes. 

90 


4 3.50 

No. 

14 



Yes. 

22 

(16) 


No. 

15 

4 250 


No. 

3S 


4 2.88 

No. 

3 

200 


No. 

2 



Yes. 

3 

100 


No. 

6 

4 1,200 


( l ) 

8 

4 750 


No. 

2 



( 17 ) 

12 





INMATES RECEIVED 
DURING YEAR. 



a 

*03 

-4-» 

c5 

a 

£ 

s 

Ph 

596 

in 

485 

1 


1 

30 


30 

316 


316 

11 


11 

25 

10 

15 

3 


3 

79 

46 

33 

11 

2 

9 

40 


40 

6 

2 

4 

24 

24 


43,000 

43,000 


1 

1 


23 

5 

18 

115 

13 

102 

4 

2 

2 

13 

13 


9 


9 

29 

29 


100 

100 


5 


5 

10 

4 

6 

41 

13 

28 

3 

1 

2 

2,719 

2,719 


9 

6 

3 

10 


10 

35 


35 

3 


3 

24 


24 

2 


2 

6 


6 

215 

215 



1 Not reported. 

2 According to ability to pay. 

3 Colored only. 

4 Average of maximum and minimum amounts. 

5 Included in report of Jewish Hospital. 


6 For adults. 

7 Orphans only. 

8 Includes value of Children’s Hospital of Drexel Home. 

9 Paid by lodges, and varies according to age. 

19 Includes report of Wm. L. Elkins Masonic Orphanage. 















































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


243 


OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


INMATES PRESENT AT CLOSE OF YEAR. 


o 


18 

17 
133 
272 
113 

91 

41 

79 

60 

33 

40 

103 

119 

12 

149 

21 

38 

61 

150 
178 

14 

76 

72 

124 

50 

70 

71 

150 

19 

10 

24 

18 

43 

5 

45 


Adults. 


22 

os 

a 


55 


46 

13 


10 

103 

119 


21 


178 

14 


29 

54 

8 

70 

44 


45 


18 

17 

133 

272 

113 

36 

41 

33 

47 

33 

30 


12 

128 

21 

31 

150 


76 

43 

70 

42 

27 

150 

19 

10 

24 

18 

43 
5 


flg 

i’B 

P'0 


1 

17 

125 


113 

51 

41 

79 

60 


40 

103 


12 

149 


38 

61 

150 

178 


76 

72 

124 

50 

25 

71 

150 


10 


18 

43 

5 


Children. 


Temporarily 

dependent. 

W ay ward or 
delinquent. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Orphan or de¬ 

pendent. 

Received with 

parent. 

Delinquent. 

17 

.... 

16 

10 

6 


16 

... 

.... 

8 

272 

126 

26 


126 

26 

10 

.... 

116 

26 





.... 

40 















3 

170 


3 

80 

3 

170 





90 




33 


















119 
























21 

3 


3 

3 































14 

























25 

11 

14 

25 







25 

20 





















19 
















24 

17 

10 

7 

17 






















45 
















Total. 


$6,506 

3.785 
47,307 
29,689 
24,791 

17,235 

20,668 

( 6 ) 

22,592 
5,446 
(») 

io 63,146 
17,000 
5,069 
24,938 

6,549 

5,413 
19,475 
28,085 
46,755 
600 
16,910 

5,750 

77,806 

28,957 

11,499 

25,326 

40.785 

3,596 

0) 

3,728 

8,070 

8,492 

2,425 

21,666 


RECEIPTS 

DURING 

YEAR. 

• 

j PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 

Derived from— 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Appro¬ 

pri¬ 

ations. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources. 


$4,094 


$2,412 

$7,016 

$7,016 



1,631 


2,154 

3,025 

3,025 



6,723 

$487 

40,097 

47,298 

35,513 

$11,785 

$6,250 

3,321 

1,652 

18,466 

33,987 

33,987 



228 


24,563 

24,818 

24,818 



17,235 


18,986 

17,986 

1,000 



20,668 

20,668 

20,668 

(*) 

( 8 ) 

( 5 ) 

( 5 ) 

( 5 ) 

(*) 

(») 


(l) 

(i) 

(i) 

27,089 

27,089 



835 

20 

4,591 

9,780 

9,780 




1,800 

(I) 

(i) 

(!) 

(!) 


22,736 

6,149 

u 34,261 

63,096 

12 59,751 

3,345 



12,000 

5,000 

17,000 

17,000 



3,514 

1,555 

5,069 

4,674 

395 



(i) 

(!) 

24,088 

24,088 


1,500 

1,621 

296 

3,132 

6,549 

6,549 


3,750 

537 


1,126 

5,445 

5,445 


17,490 


1,985 

12 18,523 

12 18,523 


5,000 

3,506 

4,275 

15,304 

25,321 

24,298 

1,023 


2,103 

8,142 

36,510 

48,363 

42,397 

5,966 


600 



soo 

800 


3,000 

475 

4,000 

9,435 

15,910 

15,910 


1,500 

1,374 


2,876 

11,608 

8,988 

2,620 

19,243 

11,319 

14,027 

33,217 

84,553 

69,214 

15,339 



8,738 

20,219 

21,961 

21,961 



3,019 


8,480 

15,918 

12,568 

3,350 

2,500 

6,588 

4,809 

11,429 

25,117 

22,238 

2,879 


3,875 

3,400 

33,510 

35,129 

35,129 



1,376 

2,220 

3,683 

3,683 



(i) 

0) 


(1) 

(1) 

0) 

2,500 

742 

398 

88 

5,927 

5,927 




8,070 

7,923 

7,923 



102 

7,620 

770 

5,629 

5,629 



2,155 

270 

2,288 

2,288 




21,666 

18,472 

18,472 







1 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 





U 




s 


Land, 


a 

• 

build- 

In- 

P 

a 

Total. 

mgs, 

and 

vested 

funds. 

a 

.2 


equip- 


a 


ment. 






1 




HH 

$54,350 

$25,000 

$29,350 

71 

(>) 

0) 

0) 

72 

200,000 

200,000 


73 

235,000 

235,000 


74 

800,000 

300,000 

500,000 

75 

55,000 

35,000 

20,000 

76 

700,000 

200,000 

500,000 

77 

( 8 > 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

78 

280,000 

200,000 

80,000 

79 

164,016 

75,000 

89,016 

80 

8 1,502,000 

750,000 

752,000 

81 

id 911,011 

COO, 497 

310,514 

82 

100,000 

100,000 


83 

38,313 

32,000 

6,313 

84 

211,000 

211,000 


85 

41,350 

20,000 

21,350 

86 

38,930 

30,200 

8,730 

87 

96,793 

65,600 

31,193 

88 

149,991 

120,000 

29,991 

89 

1,185,284 

500,000 

685,284 

90 

7,000 

7,000 


91 

137,000 

70,000 

67,000 

92 

130,200 

100,000 

30,200 

93 

570,000 

200,000 

370,000 

94 

450,000 

175,000 

275,000 

95 

17,560 

12,560 

5,000 

96 

160,000 

130,000 

30,000 

97 

970,069 

300,000 

670,069 

98 

i« 1,000 

i« 1,000 


99 

8,250 

8,250 

. 

100 

12,000 

12,000 


101 

201,891 

35,000 

166,891 

102 

35,000 

20,000 

15,000 

103 

5,861 


5,861 

104 

i« 5,069 

i« 5,069 


105 





u Includes legacies. 

13 Includes purchase of investments. 

13 Optional with the board of managers. 
h Exclusive of tubercular, epileptic, and mental cases. 


io Couples from $600 to $800; men from $300 to $500. 
16 Equipment. 

» No rule against admission. 











































































































































































































244 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table III _ HOMES FOR THE CARE OF ADULTS 


Institution number. 

NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised or conducted 
by— 

Class of inmates received. 

Year founded. 

Amount of entrance fee asked. 

Amount asked per week. 

Colored persons received. 

Paid employees at close of 

year. 

INMATES RECEIVED 
DURING YEAR. 

t 

o 

Eh 

<6 

o3 

a 

<v 

© 

Ph 


PENNSYLVANIA—Continued. 












Philadelphia— Continued. 











106 

Salvation Army Industrial Home.. 

Salvation Army.. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 

1904 



0) 

12 

321 

321 


312 Columbia Avenue. 









107 

Salvation Army Rescue Home.. 

Salvation Army.. 

Fallen women and their 

1896 



Yes. 

14 

169 


169 

5415 Lansdowne Ave. 


children. 









108 

Samaritan Shelter for Homeless Men 

Private corporation.. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 

1895 



Yes. 

3 

12,600 

12,600 


411 North Fourth St. 









109 

Sheltering Arms. 

Protestant Episcopal Church 

Destitute fallen women, de- 

1882 



Yes. 

5 

263 

58 

205 


717 Franklin St. 

serted wives, foundlings, 












and widows with orphans. 









110 

Temporary Home. 

Private corporation. 

Homeless unemployed 

1849 


$2. 50 

Yes. 


( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

505 North Sixth St. 


women and their children. 








111 

Temporary Shelter for Women 

Private corporation.. 

Homeless women and girls 4 .. 

1905 



No. 

2 

517 


517 

402 North Franklin St. 










112 

Union Home for Old Ladies. 

Private corporation. 

Aged women. 

1876 

$500 


No. 

7 

3 


3 


Forty-eighth St. and Lancaster Ave. 











113 

United States Naval Home. . 

U. S. Government... 

Aged and disabled officers, 

1833 



Yes. 

50 

13 

13 


Twenty-fourth St. and Gray’s Ferry 


seamen, and marines. 










Road. 











114 

Wayfarers’ Lodge No. 1. 

Philadelphia Society for Or- 

Homeless unemployed men 

1885 


(») 

Yes. 

21 

6,648 

6,242 

406 


1720 Lombard St. 

ganizing Charity/ 

and women, * and their 









children. 









115 

Wayfarers’ Lodge No. 2. 

Philadelphia Society for Or- 

Homeless unemployed men 

1885 


(•) 

Yes. 

19 

6,518 

6,115 

403 


1438 North Sixth St. 

ganizing Charity." 

and women, * and their 










children. 









116 

Western Temporary Home of Philadelphia. 

Private corporation. 

Homeless or convalescent 

1875 


( 7 ) 

No. 

8 

305 

118 

187 

35 North Fortieth St. 


women, and children. 








117 

Who-so-ever Rescue Home. . 

Private corporation. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 

1892 



( 3 ) 


488 

488 


101 East Chelten Ave. (Germantown). 









118 

Wm. L. Elkin’s Masonic Orphanage.. 

Masonic Home of Pennsyl- 

Wives, widows, and orphans 

1906 

3 100 


No. 

14 

17 


17 

Broad and Cayuga Sts. 

vania. 

of Masons. 










Pittsburgh: 











119 

Allegheny Widows’ Home. 

Private corporation. 

Women unable to pay high 

1866 


( l °) 

No. 

2 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

Taylor Ave. and Atlantic St. 


rent, and their children. “ 







120 

Bethesda Home. 

Private corporation. 

Homeless women, fallen girls 

1889 


3.50 

No. 

. 3 

66 

9 

57 

1315 Liverpool St., North Side. 


and their infants. 









121 

Christian Home for Women. 

Woman’s Christian Associa- 

Aged women boarders, and 

1868 

u 10 

1213 4.25 

No. 

4 

94 

18 

76 


1423 Locust St., North Side. 

tion of Pittsburgh. 

fallen girls and their infants. 









122 

East Liberty Rescue Home and Mission 

Private organization.. . 

Homeless or fallen women 

1908 


2.25 

No. 


100 


ioo 

Collins Ave. (East Liberty). 


and their children. 









123 

Episcopal Church Home of Pittsburgh. 

Private corporation (E pisco- 

Aged Episcopalian women 

1856 

12 200 


No. 

10 

22 

10 

12 

4000 Penn Ave. 

pal). 

and orphans. 









124 

Florence Crittenton Home.. 

National Florence Critten- 

Fallen women and their 

1893 

25 


Yes. 

2 

78 


78 

1852 Center Ave. 

ton Mission. 

infants. 









125 

Home for Aged and Infirm Colored Women 

Private corporation. 

Deserving aged women. 

1880 

150 


Yes. 

5 

2 


2 

Lemington Ave. 











126 

Home for the Aged. 

Little Sisters of the Poor.... 

Destitute aged persons. 

1872 



Yes. 


75 

53 

22 

Penn Ave. 











127 

Home for the Aged. 

Little Sisters of the Poor.... 

Destitute aged persons. 

1S72 



Yes. 


48 

30 

18 

501 Washington St., North Side. 











128 

House of the Good Shepherd. . . 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd. 

Erring women, and depend- 

1906 



No. 

4 

201 


201 

1725 Lincoln Ave. 

entor delinquent children. 









129 

House of the Good Shepherd. . 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd. 

Fallen \yomen and wayward 

1872 



No. 

25 

136 


136 

Lowrie St., North Side. 

girls. 









130 

Industrial Home for Colored Working Girls 

Private corporation. 

Colored working girls... 

1901 


1.25 

Yes. 

1 

10 


10 

Francis St. 











131 

Jewish Home for the Aged. 

Private association. 

Homeless aged Hebrews. 

1906 

( 3 ) 

is 5.00 

No. 

9 

20 

13 

7 


Breckenridge Ave. 










132 

Pittsburgh House of Shelter. 

Private corporation. 

Transients or residents need- 

1880 



No. 

3 

( 3 ) 

(•) 

( 3 > 


1625 Locust St. 


ing temporary assistance. 







133 

Protestant Home for Incurables. 

Private corporation. 

Incurable men and women... 

1883 

200 


No. 

21 

9 

4 

5 


5500 Butler St. 











134 

Providence Rescue and Mission Home.... 

Free Methodist Church. 

Fallen women and their 

1903 


(“) 

Yes. 

2 

40 


40 

24 Sycamore St. 


infants. 








135 

Reformed Presbyterian Aged People’s Home. 

Reformed Presbyterian 

Aged persons. 

1897 

200 


No. 

4 

2 


2 

2344 Perryville Ave., North Side. 

Women’s Association. 










136 

Roselia Foundling Asylum and Maternity 

Sisters of Charity. 

Needy mothers and abandon- 

1891 


(15) 

Yes. 

3 

442 

67 

375 

Hospital. 


ed infants. 









. Cliff and Manilla Sts. 











137 

St. Joseph’s Home for Old Ladies. 

Sisters of St. Francis. 

Aged women. 

1901 


( 3 ) 

No. 

4 

16 


16 

Pius St., South Side. 










138 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

Salvation Army. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 

1905 



0) 

5 

136 

136 



203 Anderson St. 









139 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

Salvation Army. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 

1904 



(') 

5 

152 

152 


Home and Plummer Sts. 









140 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

Salvation Army. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 

1906 



( l ) 

4 

93 

93 


112 Nineteenth St. 









141 

Salvation Army Rescue Home. 

Salvation Army. 

Fallen women and their 

1900 



Yes. 

6 

123 


123 


110 Mead Ave. 


children. 









142 


Private organization. 

Convalescent, homeless, un- 

1907 


1.00 

No. 

6 

19,600 

19,600 


522 Wylie Ave. 


employed men. 








Reading: 











143 

Beulah Anchorage. 

Private corporation. 

Homeless or fallen women 

1907 



Yes. 

2 

150 


150 


417 South Fifth St. 


and girls. 









144 

Home for Widows and Single Women. 

Private corporation. 

Aged women, single or wid- 

1875 

200 


No. 

4 

2 


2 


Sixteenth and Haak Sts. 


owed. 










1 No rule against admission. 

3 Three hours labor per day. 







2 Equipment. 


6 Includes woodyard. 








3 Not reported. 


7 For women, SI.50; children, SI. 






< Exclusive of contagious and hospital cases. 

3 For women. 





































































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


245 


OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


INMATES PRESENT AT CLOSE OF YEAR. 


RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 


Adults. 

Children. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Permanently 

dependent. 

Temporarily 

dependent. 

Wayward or 
delinquent. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Orphan or de¬ 

pendent. 

Received with 

parent. 

Delinquent. 

54 

54 



54 








23 


23 



23 

22 

c 3 ) 

c 3 ) 


22 











23 


23 


4 

19 

32 

15 

17 

10 

22 

... 

25 


25 


25 








5 


5 


5 








35 


35 

35 









89 

89 


89 









124 

118 

6 


124 








87 

74 

13 


87 

.... 

2 

1 

1 


2 

... 

1 


1 


1 

.... 

7 

3 

4 

6 

1 

... 

80 

80 



80 








*3 


43 

43 



27 


27 

27 



75 


75 


75 


25 

11 

14 


25 


12 


12 


12 


5 

3 

2 

5 



25 


25 

15 


10 

7 

5 

2 


7 

... 

135 


135 

110 

25 

.... 

10 

5 

5 

3 

7 

... 

15 


15 

15 



75 

35 

40 

75 



17 


17 



17 







33 


33 

33 









240 

140 

100 

240 









175 

100 

75 

175 









3 


3 



3 

122 


122 

122 



202 


202 


80 

122 







15 


15 


15 








39 

25 

14 

39 









( 3 ) 

m 

( 3 ) 


c 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

c 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( s ) 

( 3 ) 

52 

16 

36 

52 









6 

6 


6 







23 

2 

21 

23 









46 


46 


46 

.... 

144 

62 

82 

98 

46 

... 

16 


16 

16 









25 

25 


25 








45 

45 



45 








14 

14 



14 








18 

18 



18 

15 

( a ) 

c 3 ) 


15 


93 

93 

22 

50 

21 





15 

15 

15 







34 


34 

34 


















Total. 


$21,490 

5,547 

3,909 

8,979 

4,741 
1,735 
5,855 
16,322 

• 20,050 

6 17,045 

5,286 

40,530 

( 9 ) 

3,904 

3,399 

4,940 

( 3 ) 

13,306 
2,557 
5,442 
10,024 
5,267 
33,730 
28,244 
1,461 
13,446 
( 3 ) 

32,197 
1,245 
4,140 
23,163 

( 3 ) 

11,928 

28,459 

8,622 

4,403 

6,955 

( 3 ) 

3,236 


Derived from- 


Appro- 

pri- 

ations. 


$2,500 

X, IU*J 

2,000 

550 

4,000 

450 

4,393 

2,000 

1,494 


3,610 


( 9 ) 

2,855 

146 

2,000 

376 


300 


3,880 


2,337 

2,000 

743 


< 3 ) 


( 3 ) 


18,201 

4,493 

124 

892 

170 


10,150 

( 3 ) 

c 3 ) 


7,931 


6,250 


235 


Dona¬ 

tions. 


$3,299 

3,573 

3,545 

235 


3,867 

200 

( 3 ) 


4,168 
5,155 


( 8 ) 


257 


Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 


*2,982 


14,972 


116 


( 9 ) 

3,904 
344 
2,103 

( 3 ) 
2,426 
220 
1,099 


14,135 
455 
388 
1,296 


95 


15,868 
( 3 ) 


1,800 


9 Included in report of Masonic Home of Pennsylvania. 

10 Nominal sum for rent of rooms. 

11 For girls. 

w For old ladies. 



PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 









(2 

2 




For 


Land, 


a 



For 

perma- 


build- 

Tn- 

0 


Total. 

running 

nent 

Total. 

mgs, 

vested 

a 

Other 


ex- 

im- 


and 

funds. 

o 

sources 


penses. 

prove- 


equip- 


3 




ments. 


ment. 


















HH 

$21,490 

$23,548 

$23,548 


2 $7,106 

2 $7,106 


106 

2,248 

7,634 

7,634 


25,000 

25,000 


107 

336 

3,059 

2,163 

$896 

14,000 

14,000 


108 

5,434 

8,490 

8,490 


47,031 

20,000 

$27,031 

109 

1,524 

4,998 

4,998 


36,550 

12,000 

24,550 

110 


1,419 

1,419 





111 

1,355 

5,855 

5,855 


53,000 

30,000 

23,000 

112 

1,350 

70,431 

63,436 

6,995 

276,332 

276,332 


113 

6 15,500 

20,050 

19,600 

450 

26,000 

26,000 


114 

6 12,202 

17,045 

17,045 


18,000 

18,000 


115 

1,676 

4,905 

4,905 


28,593 

20,000 

8,593 

116 

36,920 

38,217 

38,217 


56,742 

31,742 

25,000 

117 

c 9 ) 

( 9 ) 

c 9 ) 

( s > 

(*) 

( 9 ) 

(») 

118 


1,853 

1,853 


44,200 

44,200 


119 

54 

3,410 

3,410 


20,000 

20,000 


120 

• 461 

5,185 

5,185 


38,300 

30,000 

8,300 

121 

( 3 ) 

500 

500 





122 

7,000 

14,400 

14,400 


349,000 

125,000 

224,000 

123 


2,323 

2,323 


5,000 

5,000 


124 

1,600 

5,400 

5,400 


70,000 

45,000 

25,000 

125 

( 3 ) 

9,552 

9,552 


90,000 

90,000 


126 

( 3 ) 

4,775 

4,775 


150,000 

150,000 


127 

1,394 

54,350 

48,850 

5,500 

208,000 

208,000 


128 

23,172 

42,728 

42,728 





129 

11 

1,561 

1,561 


5,100 

5,100 


130 

2,000 

11,824 

10,301 

1,523 

87,000 

85,000 

2,000 

131 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

< 3 ) 

c 3 ) 

7,500 

7,000 

500 

132 

24,266 

24,727 

24,727 


590,081 

155,731 

434,350 

133 

1,150 

1,200 

1,200 


8,750 

8,750 


134 

273 

3,219 

3,219 


54,650 

50,000 

4,650 

135 

845 

23,644 

23,644 


215,000 

215,000 


136 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

c 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

137 

11,928 

10,516 

10,516 


2 1,593 

2 1,593 


138 

28,459 

21,513 

21,513 


15,052 

15,052 


139 

8,622 

6,345 

6,345 


2 540 

2 6*0 


140 

4,723 

4,723 


17,500 

17,500 


141 


6,967 

6,967 



142 

312 

295 

295 


9,000 

9,000 


143 

2,979 

5,534 

5,534 

! 

20,000 

20,000 

144 


13 Average of maximum and minimum amounts 

14 Varies. 

i* According to ability to pay. 













































































































































































































































246 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table III.—HOMES FOR THE CARE OF ADULTS 


a 

3 

a 

a 

o 


145 

146 

147 

148 

149 

150 

151 

152 

153 

154 

155 

156 

157 

158 

159 

160 
161 

162 

163 

164 

165 

1 

2 

3 

4 


6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


PENNSYLVANIA—Continued. 

Reading —Continued. 

Hope Rescue Mission.. 

228 Wood St. 

House of the Good Shepherd.. 


Rochester: 

Passavant Memorial Homes for Epileptics... 

Scranton: 

Florence Crittenton Home. 

712 Harrison Ave. 

Home for Friendless Women and Children.. 

Adams Ave. 

Home for the Aged. 

Adams Ave. 

House of the Good Shepherd. 

Rockwell Place. 

St. Joseph’s Foundling Home and Mater¬ 
nity Hospital. 

1850 Adams Ave. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

449 South Center St. 

Upland: 

J. Lewis Crozer Home for Incurables. 

Chester, P. O. 

West Chester: 

Wentworth Home. 

112 South Church St. 

Wilkes-Barre: 

Home for Homeless Women. 

450 Carey Ave. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

516 South Main St. 

Shelter and Day Nursery. 

23 Park Ave. 

United Charities Home. 

46 North Washington St. 

Wilkins burg: 

Home for Aged Protestant Women. 

Rebecca and Coal Sts. 

United Presbyterian Home for Aged People. 

Penn and Trenton Aves. 

Williamsport: 

Aged Colored Women’s Home. 

149 Sloan Alley. 

Florence Crittenton Home. 

673 Campbell St. 

Home for the Friendless. 

409 Campbell St. 

York: 

Christian Home. 

53 South Beaver St. 

RHODE ISLAND. 

Bristol: 

Benjamin Church Home for Aged Men. 

1010 Hope St. 

Home for Aged Women. 

II Franklin St. 

Rhode Island Soldiers’ Home. 

East Providence: 

Odd Fellows’ Home 16 . 

87 Weybosset St., Providence (office). 

Edgewood: 

Sophia Little Home. 

135 Norwood Ave. 

Newport: 

Henderson Home for Aged Men. 

14 Clarke St. 

Newport Home for the Aged. 

87 Washington St. 

Pawtucket: 

Home for the Aged. 

964 Main St. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

99 North Main St. 

Providence: 

Bethany Home of Rhode Island. 

III South Angell St. 

Home for Aged Colored Women. 

45 East Transit St. 

Home for Aged Men and Aged Couples. 

807 Broad St. 

1 According to ability to pay. 

* For infants received without parents. 

3 No rules against admission. 

< Equipment. 

6 Exclusive of contagious diseases, malignant tumors, insanity, and epilepsy. 


Supervised or conducted 
by— 

Class of inmates received. 

r d 

® 

§ 

O 

«*-« 

u 

03 

© 

£ 

Amount of entrance fee asked. 

Amount asked per week. 

Colored persons received. 

Paid employees at close of 

year. 

1 INMATES RECEIVED 

DURING YEAR. 

'S 

o 

H 

© 

*03 

a 

© 

13 

a 

© 

Private corporation.. 

Homeless men 

1894 



Yes. 

8 

10,872 

10,872 


Sisters of the Good Shepherd. 

Erring women and unpro- 

1889 



Yes. 

2 

57 

57 


tected girls. 









Institute of Protestant De- 

Epileptics. 

1895 


( l ) 

No. 

9 

15 

7 

8 

conesses (Lutheran). 









National Florence Critten- 

Wayward girls, fallen women 

1893 


3 $1.00 

Yes. 

3 

5 

4 

1 

ton Mission. 

and their children. 









Private corporation. 

Needy women and children.. 

1872 


0) 

Yes. 

16 

120 

42 

78 

Little Sisters of the Poor.... 

Indigent aged persons. 

1908 


Yes. 


54 

28 

26 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd. 


1889 



No. 

5 

85 


85 

unprotected children.' 









Sisters of the Immaculate 

Fallen women, abandoned 

1890 

$25 

1.75 

Yes. 

11 

307 

126 

181 

Heart of Mary. 

children, and orphans. 









Salvation Armv. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 

1908 



( 3 ) 

5 

56 

56 




1897 

100 


No. 

25 

3 


3 

Endowment. 










Private organization. 

Aged gentlewomen ... . 

1899 

100 

3.00 

No. 

3 

1 


1 

Private corporation... 

Homeless aged women... 

1892 

0) 


No. 

5 

5 


5 

Salvation Army. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 

1908 


( 3 ) 

4 

95 

95 


Florence Crittenton Circle 

Fallen or homeless unem- 

1907 

8 25 

( 9 ) 

Yes. 

2 

107 


107 

of Wilkes-Barre. 

ployed women and depend- 










ent children. 









Charity Organization So- 

Homeless men and women, 

1895 



Yes. 

7 

380 

165 

215 

ciety of Wilkes-Barre. 

dependent and delinquent 










children. 









Private corporation. 

Aged women. 

1871 

200 


No. 

14 

7 


7 

United Presbyterian Wo- 

Homeless aged persons... 

1890 

300 


No. 


8 

2 

6 

men’s Association. 










Private corporation. 

Aged women. 

1897 

100 


Yes. 

2 

3 


3 

National Florence Critten- 

Fallen women and their in- 

1895 



No. 

2 

32 

8 

24 

ton Mission. 

fants. 









Private corporation. 

Homeless aged women and 

1872 

is 300 

K 1.00 

No. 

16 

20 

9 

11 


orphans. 









Private corporation. 

Fallen women and unpro- 

1897 



Yes. 

5 

98 

38 

60 


tected Children. 









Trustees of Benjamin Church 

Aged maie natives of Bristol. 

1906 

250 


Yes. 

4 

6 

6 


Endowment. 









Trustees of Mrs. Mary Wal- 

Aged women. 

1873 

100 


No. 

2 

9 


9 

ker Endowment. 










State of Rhode Island. 

Civil War veterans. 

1887 



Yes. 


20 

20 


Independent Order of Odd 

Odd Fellows, their widows, 

1910- 



No. 





Fellows. 

orphans, and Rebekahs. 









Prisoners’ Aid Association .. 

Discharged female prisoners 

1873 



No. 

2 

78 


78 


and fallen women. 








Private association. 

Impoverished aged men. 

1909 



( 17 ) 

4 

4 

4 


Private organization. 

m . 

<“) 

(“) 

(“) 

( ll III ) 

( u ) 

( ll ) 

( ii ) 

( ll ) 

Little Sisters of the Poor.... 

Destitute aged persons. 

1881 



Yes. 


67 

24 

43 

Salvation Army. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 

1904 



(u 

10 

230 

230 

Private corporation. 

Convalescent homeless and 

1892 


5.00 

No. 

4 

20 


20 


aged persons. 








Private corporation. 

Aged women. 

1890 

150 


Yes. 

4 




Private corporation. 

Indigent aged couples and 

1875 

(18) 


No. 

13 

5 

5 



men. 









6 Includes report of J. Lewis Crozer Homeopathic Hospital. 

7 Residents, $250; nonresidents, $500. 

8 For girls only. 

* From 50 cents to $2 per week for motherless children. 

10 Includes children. 














































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


247 


OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 



INMATES PRESENT 

AT CLOSE OF TEAR. 



RECEIPTS 

DURING 

YEAR. 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Adults. 

Children. 

Total. 

Derived from— 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

Total. 

CD 

73 

* 

Female. 

Permanently 

dependent. 

Temporarily 

dependent. 

| W ay ward or 

1 delinquent. 

'cS 

+-> 

O 

IH 

© 

'c3 

Female. 

Orphan or de¬ 

pendent. 

Received with 

parent. 

| Delinquent. 

Appro¬ 

pri¬ 

ations. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources. 

43 

43 



43 








$3,905 


$809 


£3,096 

£3.953 

$3,953 


$12 non 

$12 000 


145 

74 


74 



74 

5 


5 



5 

15,880 

$1,250 

4,913 

$141 

9,576 

28,773 

28 773 


200 000 

200.000 


146 

59 

17 

42 

59 



3 

2 

1 

3 



12,658 

5,000 

2,981 

4,223 

454 

12 838 

12 838 


107,112 

100,000 

$7,112 

147 

25 


25 



25 

5 

4 

1 

2 

3 


4,881 

1,531 

239 

168 

2 943 

4 880 

4 701 

$179 

18 000 

18,000 

148 

24 


24 

24 



120 

42 

78 

117 

3 


8,488 

3,936 

1,962 

1,366 

1,224 

8 488 

6 671 

1,817 

23,552 

23,552 

149 

123 

69 

54 

123 









5,161 

4,950 

211 

5,601 

5,601 

200,000 

200,000 

150 

109 


109 

44 


65 

62 


62 

62 



13,083 

1,250 

1,500 

543 

9,790 

27,897 

27,897 


150,000 

150,000 


151 

27 


27 


17 

10 

118 

47 

71 

76 

14 

28 

7,916 

4,410 

734 

2,372 

400 

12,775 

12,775 


100,000 

100,000 


152 

18 

18 



18 








9,853 


9,853 

9,167 

9,167 


4 1,927 

4 1,927 


153 

23 

6 

17 

23 









6 32,548 


250 


32,298 

6 29,962 

28,462 

1,500 

*800,000 

300,000 

500,000 

154 

12 


12 

12 









2,171 


657 


1,514 

2,105 

2,080 

25 

10,748 

5,000 

5,748 

155 

29 


29 

29 









12,024 


8,721 

1,150 

2 153 

5,286 

5,286 


38,000 

21,000 

17,000 

156 

19 

19 



19 








5,208 



5,208 

6,480 

6,480 


4 1,239 

4 1,239 

157 

10 37 


(il) 

( ll ) 

( u ) 

( u ) 

(U) 

(U) 

(U) 

(U) 

(U) 


3,368 


540 

808 

2,020 

3,334 

3,334 


15,500 

15,500 


158 

1 


1 

1 

8 

4 

4 

6 

1 

1 

10,201 

3,000 

6,098 


1,103 

30,018 

7,018 

23,000 

27,719 

13,000 

14,719 

159 

61 


61 

61 









20,277 

232 

4,436 


15,609 

16,476 

16,034 

442 

361,741 

50,000 

311,741 

160 

72 

8 

64 

72 









10,691 


1,931 

2,000 

6,760 

13,147 

10,138 

3,009 

100,000 

100,000 

161 

12 


12 

12 









1,810 

778 

1,032 


1,820 

820 

1,000 

5,000 

5,000 


162 

9 


9 



9 

3 

(U) 

(ii) 


3 


1,082 

1,000 

82 



1,109 

1,109 

5,500 

5,500 


163 

37 


37 

37 



58 

24 

34 

58 



12,198 

6,000 


3,185 

3,013 

12,198 

12,198 


42,000 

42,000 


164 

22 

11 

11 

22 



8 

3 

5 

8 



3,080 

2,000 

600 


480 

6,494 

2,494 

4,000 

13,000 

13,000 


165 

7 

7 


7 









(U) 

(U) 

(ii) 

(!1) 

(U) 

(ii) 

(ll) 

(U) 

(U) 

(U) 

(ll) 

1 

9 


9 

9 









(U) 

(ii) 

(“) 

(») 

(M) 

(u) 

(ii) 

( u ) 

(U) 

(ii) 

(“) 

2 

130 

130 


130 









16 32,180 

16 31,025 

1,155 

40,066 

40,066 

175,000 

175,000 

3 













2,367 

2,235 


132 

161 

161 


7,206 

5,000 

2,206 

4 

11 


11 



11 

2 

1 

1 


2 


2,267 

1,000 

450 

57 

760 

2,242 

2,151 

91 

33,500 

13,500 

20,000 

5 

5 

5 


5 









7,609 



7,609 

3,048 

3,048 


146,148 

15,000 

131,148 

6 

(“) 

(U) 

(“) 

(“) 

(“) 

(») 

(») 

<“) 

C*0 

(“) 

(“> 

(“) 

(“) 

(“) 

( II ) 

(») 

(") 

m 

C 11 ) 

( u ) 

(“) 

( u ) 

(“) 

7 

200 

100 

100 

200 









7,178 


1,866 


5,312 

7,018 

7,018 


(n) 

(U) 


8 

34 

34 



34 








15,687 



15,687 

13,061 

13,061 


4 3,308 

4 3,308 


9 

31 

31 

31 




• 




8,354 


1,958 

6,049 

347 

7,500 

7,000 

500 

27,500 

25,000 

2,500 

10 

10 


10 

10 









2,376 


1,676 

700 

2,400 

2,400 


10,000 

5,000 

5,000 

11 

40 

37 

3 

40 







.... 


33,872 


8,891 


24,981 

>» 35,052 

>9 33,820 

1,232 

400,000 

100,000 

300,000 

12 


n Not reported. 

> a Reported under adults. 

For women. 

14 For children. 

» Includes $13,025 from U. S. Government. 


16 Not opened until 1911. 

17 Indeterminate. 

18 For each couple, $550; men, $300. 

wIncludes $16,195 for new investments. 









































































































































































































Institution number. 


248 BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table III.—HOMES FOR THE CARE OF ADULTS 


13 


14 


15 

16 

17 

18 


19 


10 

11 


12 


13 

14 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


RHODE ISLAND—Continued. 


Providence— Continued. 

Home for Aged Women. 

180 Tockwotton St. 

House of the Good Shepherd. 

275 Eaton St. 

New England Rest Cottage. 

4 Avon St. 

Providence Rescue Home. 

41 Beacon Ave. 

St. Elizabeth Home. 

183 Atlantic Ave. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 
98 Wickenden St. 

Woonsocket: 

Ballon Home for the Aged. 

High and Arnold Sts. 


SOUTH CAROLINA. 

Aiken: 

Old Folks’ Home.. 

York St. 

Charleston: 

Ashley River Asylum. 

President Sf. 

Caroline Wilkinson Home.. 

108 Cannon St. 

Centenary M. E. Church Home. 
88 Smith St. 

Church Home. 

Ashley Ave. 

Florence Crittenton Home.__ 

63 Washington St. 

Franke Home. 

261 Calhoun Ave. 

Presbyterian Home. 

108 Beaufain St. 

St. Margaret’s Home 7 . 

1 Minority St. 

St. Philip’s Church Home. 

142 Church St. 

William Euston Home. 

Upper King St. 

Columbia: 

Door of Hope. 

1516 Calhoun St. 

Greenville: 

Margaret Home. 

515 Rutherford St. 

Salvation Army Rescue Home. 
Rutherford St. 

SOUTH DAKOTA. 

Hot Springs: 

Battle Mountain Sanitarium w . 


South Dakota Soldiers’ Home. 


TENNESSEE. 

Chattanooga: 

Florence Crittenton Home. 

625 East Fifth St. 

Old Ladies’ Home. 

South Dodds Ave. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

42 Rossville Ave. 

Hermitage: 

Confederate Soldiers’ Home. 

Johnson City: 

National Home for Disabled Volunteer Sol¬ 
diers. 

Knoxville: 

Florence Crittenton Home. 

2343 East Woodbine Ave. 

Mount Rest Home. 

Rutledge Pike. 

Memphis: 

Home for Incurables. 

1467 McLemore Ave. 

Home for Old Folks and Orphans 7 . 

Hemand Road and Norris Ave. 

House of the Good Shepherd. 

Lumpkin St. 


Supervised or conducted 
by— 


Private corporation. 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd. 
Private corporation. 


Private corporation (Pro¬ 
testant churches). 

Private corporation (Epis¬ 
copal). 

Salvation Army. 


Private corporation. 


City of Aiken. 


City of Charleston. 


Church of the Holy Com¬ 
munion. 

Centenary M. E. Church.... 

Protestant Episcopal Church 

National Florence Critten¬ 
ton Mission. 

Lutheran churches.. 


Presbyterian churches. 

King’s Daughters. 

Parish of St. Philip_ 


Trustees of William Euston 
Endowment. 

Private corporation.. 


Women’s Missionary Union. 
Salvation Army. 


U. S. Government_ 

State of South Dakota. 


National Florence Critten¬ 
ton Mission. 

Old Ladies’ Home Associa¬ 
tion. 

Salvation Army. 


State of Tennessee.. 
U. S. Government. 


National Florence Critten¬ 
ton Mission. 

Private corporation. 


King’s Daughters.. 

Private corporation. 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd 


Class of inmates received. 


1 Includes “care of inmates.” 
* Included in “donations.” 

3 Not reported. 

4 No rules against admission. 


Aged women.. 
Fallen women. 


Fallen girls and women, and 
their infants. 

Fallen girls and women, and 
their infants. 

Incurable and convalescent 
dependent women. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 


Aged persons. 


Paupers and chronic invalids. 


Indigent aged persons 


Impoverished Episcopalian 
women. 

Homeless aged members of 
the church. 

Indigent Episcopalian wo¬ 
men. 

Fallen women and their in¬ 
fants. 

Needy and infirm persons.... 

Partially self-supporting aged 
women. 

Incurable and convalescent 
women and children. 

Homeless Episcopalian wo¬ 
men. 

Partially self-supporting aged 
persons. 

Fallen women and their chil¬ 
dren. 

Baptist missionaries and 
their children., 

Fallen women and their chil¬ 
dren. 


Disabled Volunteer soldiers 
and sailors. 

Veterans. 


Fallen girls and thier infants.. 

Homeless aged women. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 

Confederate veterans. 


Disabled volunteer soldiers 
and sailors. 

Fallen women and their in¬ 
fants. 

Impoverished aged women... 


Incurables. 


Homeless aged women and 
orphans. 

Fallen women, wayward 
girls, delinquent and de¬ 
pendent children. 


T> 

© 


OS 

© 


1856 

1904 
1902 
1894 
1882 
1900 

1900 

1877 

( 3 ) 

1881 

1894 

1850 

1899 

1892 

1909 

1910 
1870 
1882 

1897 

1905 
1908 


1865 

1889 

1888 

1904 

1909 

1890 
1865 

1896 

1893 

1907 

1894 
1875 


© 

o 

a 

C3 

M 

a 

© 


a 

3 

o 

a 


$200 


350 


300 


10 


( 12 ) 

200 


(16) 

10 


© 

is 

© 

P< 

"3 

© 

A4 


a 

3 

o 

a 


( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

$ 1.00 


( 8 ) 


( 9 ) 


18 5.00 


n 3.00 


is 5.00 
73 5.00 
H1.50 


3 

O 


© 

P, 


O 

O 


No. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

No. 

( 4 ) 

Yes. 

(«) 

(') 

No. 

Yes. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 


No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

Yes. 


Yes. 

Yes. 

No. 

No. 

( 4 ) 

No. 

Yes. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

(«) 

No. 


25 *-• 

£ c3 

p. 


12 

9 

2 

2 

14 

10 


( 3 ) 


130 

38 


3 

4 

35 

383 

1 

3 


INMATES RECEIVED 
DURING YEAR. 


o 

Pi 


6 

75 

53 

123 

10 

196 


1 

100 


3 

10 

40 

2 

8 


2 

6 

33 

2 

96 


481 

87 

120 

8 

152 

8 

764 

23 

2 

12 


115 


3 Equipment. 

6 Colored only. 

7 Not opened until 1911. 

3 Nominal sum for rent of rooms. 


® 

*c3 

a 


196 


35 


481 

87 


152 

8 

764 


C3 

a 

© 


6 

75 

53 

117 

10 


66 


3 

10 

34 

1 

8 


2 

6 

33 

2 

96 


120 

8 


23 

2 


115 














































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


249 


OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


INMATES PRESENT AT CLOSE OF YEAR. 


RECEIPTS 

DURING 

YEAR. 


PAYMENTS DURING 

YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Adults. 

Children. 

Total. 

Derived from— 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

Total. 

<D 

a 

<© 

'cS 

a 

© 

PH 

Permanently 

dependent. 

Temporarily 

dependent. 

Wayward or 
delinquent. 

'cS 

o 

EH 

<6 

'cS 

a 

£ 

a 

© 

PH 

Orphan or de¬ 

pendent. 

Received with 

parent. 

Delinquent. 

Appro¬ 

pri¬ 

ations. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources. 

40 


40 

40 









$40,859 


i$40,859 

( 2 ) 


$35,886 

(3) 

( s ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


13 

85 


85 



85 







20,200 

$2,000 

4,000 

$200 

$14,000 

20,000 

$8,000 

$12,000 

$50,000 

$50,000 


14 

53 


53 

3 

10 

40 

20 

( s ) 

(3) 


20 


1,671 

1,601 

70 

1,731 

1,468 

263 

5,500 

5,500 


15 

17 


17 



17 

6 

3 

3 

6 



3,006 


2,616 


390 

3,021 

3,021 


10,500 

10,000 

$500 

16 

35 


35 

35 









10,021 


4,375 

641 

5,005 

9,506 

7,772 

1,734 

125,000 

25,000 

100,000 

17 

36 

36 



36 








16,471 



16,471 

15,917 

15,917 


6 3,560 

6 3,560 

18 

17 


17 

17 









2,632 




2,632 

4,765 

4,765 


27,693 

15,000 

12,693 

19 

5 

2 

3 

5 









264 

96 

168 


264 

264 


( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


1 

43 

15 

28 

43 









5,000 

5,000 




5,000 

5,000 


10,000 

10,000 


2 

6 


6 

6 









340 

340 



326 

326 


8,000 

8,000 


3 

6 


6 

4 

2 








( 3 ) 


(») 



(3) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


4 

10 


10 

10 









(3) 


78 

(3) 

( 3 ) 

(3) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

6,000 

6,000 


5 

18 


18 



18 







3,746 

500 

2,713 

472 

61 

3,616 

3,000 

616 

10,800 

10,800 


6 

8 

1 

7 

8 









2,280 



2,280 

2,701 

2,701 


56,500 

25,000 

31,500 

7 

10 


10 

8 

2 








300 


60 


240 

278 

278 


13,000 

10,000 

3,000 

8 
























9 

19 


19 

19 









2,034 




2,034 

983 

583 

400 

32,000 

15,000 

17,000 

10 

72 

3 

69 

72 









8,364 




8,364 

3,530 

3,530 


235,417 

100,000 

135,417 

11 

21 


21 


21 







1,206 


967 

115 

124 

1,206 

1,106 

100 

13,000 

10,000 

3,000 

12 

1 


1 

1 



2 


2 


2 


1,200 


1,200 



1,200 

1,200 


20,000 

20,000 


13 

23 


23 



23 

a 




n 


2,784 


2,122 


662 

2,809 

2,809 


4,000 

4,000 


14 

316 

316 

316 






179,971 

u 177,575 


2,396 

164,042 

146,620 

17,422 

729,700 

729,700 


1 

232 

232 


232 









78,614 

78,614 



72,674 

67,499 

5,175 

100,000 

100,000 


2 

8 

8 


8 

16 

10 

6 

16 



1,458 

630 

225 

413 

190 

1,471 

1,237 

234 

10,000 

9,000 

1,000 

1 

23 


23 

23 









2,131 

1,845 

118 

168 


2,819 

2,819 


82,000 

50,000 

32,000 

2 

12 

12 

12 








4,957 



4,957 

4,812 

4,812 


6 839 

5 839 


3 

190 

190 


190 








13,571 

13,091 

480 



21,350 

21,350 


85,000 

85,000 


4 

1 606 

1 AOA 


1 606 









293,967 

n 287,650 



6,317 

290,398 

280,436 

9,962 

1,688,572 

1,688,572 


5 

7 


7 



7 

4 

3 

1 

4 



1,770 

1,687 

14 

69 

1,403 

910 

493 

5,000 

5,000 


6 

12 


12 

12 









1,200 


16 1,200 


( 2 ) 

1,200 

1,200 


10,000 

10,000 


7 







o 


2 

2 



11,121 


8,918 

2,070 

133 

5,044 

5,044 


25,760 

25,760 


8 


















30,000 

30,000 


9 

150 


150 



150 

40 


40 

30 

.... 

10 

14,508 


4,266 

1,479 

8,763 

13,475 

13,475 


188,000 

188,000 


10 


9 No weekly charge. Children $100 to $150 per annum, according to age. 
>o Branch of National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers, 
u From U. S. Government. 

13 Confinement fee, $25, if able. 


is Per month; no weekly charge. 

M Average of maximum and minimum amounts, 
is Includes receipts from “other sources.” 
i« Varies. 

























































































































































































































250 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table III.—HOMES FOR THE CARE OF ADULTS 


© 

rO 

5 

a 

a 

a 

o 


11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 
17 

1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 
21 

22 

23 

24 

1 

2 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


TENNESSE E—Continued. 

Memphis— Continued. 

Mary Galloway Home for Aged Women.... 
Manassas and Monroe Sts. 

Memphis Home for Aged Men. 

463 North Dunlap St. 

Nashville: 

Florence Crittenton Home. 

613 Ewing Ave. 

Home for the Aged. 

521 Main St. 

Masonic Widows’ and Orphans’ Home. 

Gallatin Pike R. D. 1 (Madison P. O.). 

Old Woman’s Home. 

2811 West End Ave. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

306 North First Ave. 


TEXAS. 

Abilene: 

State Epileptic Colony. 
Arlington: 

Berachah Home. 


Austin: 

Texas Confederate Home. 

Corsicana: 

Odd Fellows’ Widows’ and Orphans’ Home.. 


Dallas: 

House of the Good Shepherd. 

536 West Page Ave. 

St. Mathew’s Home for Aged Women. 

3613 Brown St. 

Virginia K. Johnson Home. 

Madison Ave. (Oak Cliff). 

Fort Worth: 

Cumberland Rest. 

1628 Sixth Ave. 

Masonic Widows’ and Orphans’ Home of 
Texas. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

1409 Commerce St. 

Woman’s Rescue Home. 

820 Crawford St. 

Galveston: 

Letitia Rosenberg Home for Women. 

Twenty-fifth and O £ Sts. 

Houston: 

Florence Crittenton Rescue Home.. 

3119 Caroline Ave. 

Sheltering Arms.. 

1517 Hutchins St. 

Palestine: 

WOman’s Relief Home.. 

Dallas St. 

Pilot Point: 

Rest Cottage.. 


San Antonio: 

Home for Destitute Children and Aged 
Persons. 

1802 Burnett St. 

House of Refuge.. 

Rio Grande and Montana Sts. 

St. Francis Home for the Aged.. 

2017 South Flores St. 

Salvation Army Rescue Home.. 

3019 River Ave. 

San Antonio Rescue Home.. 

223 South San Saba St. 

Waco: 

Home of the Good Shepherd.. 

1008 Cleveland St. 

Old Woman’s Home.. 

1711 South Tenth St. 

Weatherford: 

Pythian Home of Texas. 

R. D. 1. 


UTAH. 

Ogden: 

Florence Crittenton Home. 

Butler Ave. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 
257 Twenty-fifth St. 

Salt Lake City: 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 
19 Orpheum Ave. 


Supervised or conducted 
by- 


King’s Daughters... 
Private corporation. 


National Florence Critten¬ 
ton Mission. 

Little Sisters of the Poor.... 

Masonic Grand Lodge of 
Tennessee. 

Private corporation. 


Salvation Army. 


State of Texas. 


Home Mission and Rescue 
Commission of Texas. 

State of Texas. 


Independent Order of Odd 
Fellows of Texas. 


Sisters of Our Lady of Char¬ 
ity of Refuge. 

St." Mathew’s Cathedral 
(Episcopal). 

Private organization (M. E. 
Church, South). 

Private corporation (Pres¬ 
byterian). 

Masonic Grand Lodge of 
Texas. 

Salvation Army. 


Private organization. 
Private corporation.. 


National Florence Critten¬ 
ton Mission. 

Private corporation (Epis¬ 
copal). 

Private corporation. 


Pentecostal Church of the 
Nazarene. 

Private corporation. 


Sisters of Our Lady of 
Charity of Refuge. 

Sisters of Charity of the In¬ 
carnate Word. 

Salvation Army. 


Private organization (M. E. 
Church, South). 


Private corporation. 
Private corporation. 


Knights of Pythias of Texas. 


National Florence Critten¬ 
ton Mission. 

Salvation Army. 


Salvation Army. 


Class of inmates received. 


Impoverished aged women... 
Indigent aged men. 


Fallen women and depend¬ 
ent children. 

Indigent aged persons. 


Indigent widows and orphans 
of Masons. 

Aged gentlewomen. 


Homeless unemployed men. 


Epileptics. 


Fallen girls and their infants, 
and children of the slums. 

Civil War veterans.. 


Indigent Odd Fellows and 
their wives, and families of 
deceased Odd Fellows. 


Wayward and fallen girls. 

Impoverished aged women_ 

Fallen girls and their infants.. 

Impoverished aged women... 

Widows and orphans of Ma¬ 
sons. 

Homeless unemployed men... 
Fallen girls and their children. 


Impoverished homeless 
women. 

Wayward girls, fallen women 
and their infants. 

Aged and friendless women... 


Homeless self-sustaining wid¬ 
ows, and orphans. 

Fallen women and their in¬ 
fants. 

Aged persons and orphans.... 


Fallen women and dependent 
children. 

Aged men and women. 


Fallen women and their in¬ 
fants. 

Fallen women and their in¬ 
fants. 

Indigent widows, fallen girls, 
and dependent children. 

Homeless destitute women 
and children. 

■Widows and orphans of 
Knights of Pythias. 


Fallen women, homeless girls 
and children. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 


Homeless unemployed men.. 1899 


•o 

GJ 

T3 

s 

a 

o 


a 

a> 


1896 

1902 

1874 

1903 
1888 
1891 

1908 

1901 

1895 

1891 
1886 

1909 
1901 
1893 

1897 
1899 

1899 
1888 

1885 

1895 

1893 

1892 
1903 
1897 

1897 

1893 

1910 
1895 

1906 

1892 

1908 

1900 
1890 


■a 

o 

Ml 


a 

o 

a 

e 

a 


a 

a 

o 

a 

< 


$15 


( 3 ) 


1 500 


100 


500 


( 2 ) 


25 


25 


a 

<3 

P< 


M 

3 

a 

a 

o 

a 

«! 


1 $5.00 
2.00 

( 3 ) 


5.00 


i 10.00 


( 8 ) 


( 3 ) 


* 3. 75 


( 2 ) 


2.50 

( 10 ) 

2.00 


2.50 


■a 

> 

'S3 


a 

o 


P. 

T3 


o 

O 


No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

( 6 ) 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

( 6 ) 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

( 9 ) 

Yes. 

No. 

Yes. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 


Yes. 

( 5 ) 

( s ) 


a> 

3 . 

a 


6 

4 

2 

62 

4 

57 

17 


1 

7 

2 

31 

3 

3 


1 

1 

(*) 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


INMATES RECEIVED 
DURING YEAR. 


Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

5 


5 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

58 

15 

43 

20 

12 

8 

25 

10 

15 

3 


3 

59 

59 


91 

64 

27 

77 

7 

70 

60 

60 


83 

35 

48 

53 


53 

1 


1 

68 


68 

10 

10 


56 

27 

29 

7 

7 


38 


38 

5 


5 

40 


40 

8 


8 

8 


8 

75 


75 

(*) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

33 

3 

30 

78 

37 

41 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

(*) 

28 


28 

45 

8 

37 

246 


246 

21 

12 

9 

19 


19 

25 

25 


60 

60 



1 Per month; no weekly charge. 

2 Not reported. 

8 Varies. 


4 Average of maximum and minimum amounts, 
s No rules against admission. 

6 Equipment. 































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


251 


OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 



INMATES PRESENT AT CLOSE OF 

YEAR. 



RECEIPTS 

DURING 

YEAR. 


PAYMENTS DURING 

YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Adults. 

Children. 

Total. 

Derived from— 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

Total. 

© 

’a 

a 

Female. 

Permanently 

dependent. 

Temporarily 

dependent. 

W ay ward or 
delinquent. 

”3 

o 

H 

© 

a 

Female. 

Orphan or de¬ 

pendent. 

Received with 

parent. 

| Delinquent. 

Appro¬ 

pri¬ 

ations. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources. 

20 


20 

20 









$2,500 


$1,500 

$1,000 


$2,500 

$2,500 


$15,000 

$15,000 


u 

13 

13 


13 









1,800 


500 

1,300 


1,500 

1,500 


15,000 

15,000 


12 

22 


22 

22 


18 

7 

11 

4 

14 


5,406 

$1,225 

1,144 

228 

$2,809 

5,405 

4,773 

$632 

21,500 

18,000 

$3,500 

13 

50 

25 

25 

50 









4,851 


4,791 

60 


4,700 

2,000 

2,700 

80,000 

80,000 


14 

35 


35 

10 

25 


100 

47 

53 

34 

66 


22,832 


22,832 



22,832 

13,486 

9,346 

65,000 

65,000 


15 

30 


30 

30 










800 

( 2 ) 

2,000 

3,600 

3,600 

50,000 

50,000 


16 

14 

14 


14 








5,188 



5,188 

5,984 

5,984 


«2,183 

8 2,183 


17 

359 

206 

153 

359 









85,650 

85,650 



76,900 

65,000 

11,900 

400,000 

400,000 


1 

25 


25 


25 

15 

8 

7 

14 

1 


7,664 

7,664 



6,274 

5,303 

971 

25,000 

25,000 


2 

390 

390 


390 









90,228 

90,228 



89,228 

79,228 

10,000 

200,000 

200,000 


3 

18 

2 

16 

18 



252 

112 

140 

252 



30,000 

30,000 



34,453 

25,320 

9,133 

220,000 

220,000 


4 

26 


26 


26 






1,703 


511 

60 

1,132 

2,755 

1,455 

1,300 

7 1,300 

7 1,300 


5 

5 


5 

5 









(*) 


1,820 

(*) 

( 2 ) 

1,700 

1,400 

300 

8,000 

7,500 

500 

6 

45 


45 



45 







(») 


(*) 

(«) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

7 

20 


20 

20 









1,725 


1,003 

722 

1,710 

1,610 

100 

10,000 

10,000 


8 

20 


20 

20 



212 

100 

112 

212 



63,403 


53,004 


10,399 

2,975 

44,698 

38,954 

5,744 

333,994 

190,000 

143,994 

9 

2 

2 


2 








2,975 



2,983 

2,847 

136 

« 1,121 

6 1,121 


10 

15 


15 



15 

10 

6 

4 


10 


2,800 


900 

800 

1,100 

1,900 

900 

1,000 

3,000 

3,000 


11 

29 


29 

29 







4,326 


4,326 



3,800 

3,800 


25,000 

25,000 


12 

7 


7 


7 

2 


(t) 

2 



1,440 


1,258 

182 


1,231 

1,231 


7,500 

7,500 


13 

5 


5 

5^ 









1,764. 


1,636 


128 

1,518 

1,377 

141 

9,700 

6,500 

3,200 

14 

5 


5 

5 









( s ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

3,000 

( 2 ) 

15 

99 


99 



22 

23 

g 

15 

20 

3 


2,383 

2,383 



2,277 

2,277 


5,000 

5,000 


16 

( 2 ) 

c) 

( 2 ) 

c j ) 

(*) 

(») 

(*> 

(*) 

(*> 

(*> 


( 2 ) 

(*) 

(*) 

(*) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( J ) 

(*) 

(*) 

17 



6Q 



69 

62 


62 

36 

26 


700 


700 



20,000 

15,000 

5,000 

50,000 

50,000 


18 

73 

32 

41 

73 





( 2 ) 


m 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

19 


c) 

(*) 

(*) 

(*) 

(*) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

(*) 

( 2 ) 

(*) 

( 2 ) 

(*) 

( 2 ) 

( J ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

(*) 

(*) 

( 2 ) 

20 






16 

fi 

(2\ 

('ll 

8 



2,893 


2,893 



2,315 

2,315 


30,000 

30,000 


21 












i *;nn 


1,370 

130 


1,500 

1,500 





22 

5 


5 

2 


3 

4 


(.*) 







. 





o 


Q 

q 









1,200 

200 

950 

50 


1,200 

900 

300 

7,000 

7,000 


23 

Q 


2 

3 



70 

39 

31 

70 



41,887 


893 


40,994 

16,249 

14,065 

2,184 

209,627 

140,637 

68,990 

24 

3 


3 


3 


4 

1 

3 

2 

2 

... 

957 

360 

411 

186 


960 

960 

. 

6,000 

6,000 


1 













4,037 




4,037 

3,852 

3,615 

237 

1,000 


1,000 

2 


V. 2 ) 



\ ) 

190 








6,274 




6,274 

6,188 

5,650 

538 

1,200 


1,200 

3 


1 ZZ 























7 Value of laundry machinery. 

» Separate room $10 per month; $6 with roommate. 


»Colored only. 

io According to ability to pay. 




























































































































































































































Institution number. 


252 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table III.—HOMES FOR THE CARE OF ADULTS 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


Supervised or conducted 
by— 


Class of inmates received. 


■d 

•o 

a 

o 

5 


VERMONT. 




1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 

9 


Bennington: 

Soldiers’ Home in Vermont. 

Hunt St. 

Brattle boro: 

Home for the Aged and Disabled. 

34 Western Ave. 

Burlington: 

Home for Aged Women. 

St. Paul St. 

Home for Friendless Women. 

260 Shelburne Road. 

Providence Orphan Asylum and Hospital *.. 
North Ave. 

Ludlow: 

Gill Odd Fellows’ Home. 

Rutland: 

Loretto Home. 

Convent Ave. 

Rutland Old Ladies’ Home. 

77 North Main St. 

St. Johnsbury: 

Home for Aged Women. 

Prospect Ave. 


State of Vermont. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation (Protes¬ 
tant churches). 

Private corporation. 

Sisters of Charity of Provi¬ 
dence. 

Independent Order of Odd 
Fellows of Vermont. 

Sisters of St. Joseph. 

Rutland Missionary Society. 

Private corporation. 


Veterans 


Homeless aged persons 


Homeless aged women. 

Fallen women. 

Aged persons and destitute 
children. 

Indigent Odd Fellows, Re- 
bekahs, and their children. 

Aged women.. 

Deserving aged women. 

Deserving aged women.. 


1888 

1892 

1886 

1892 

1854 

1895 

1904 

1890 

1891 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 
21 
22 

23 

24 

25 

26 

27 


VIRGINIA. 

Alexandria: 

Old Ladies’ Home. 

203 Fairfax St., north. 

Bedford City: 

Elks’ National Home. 

Hampton: 

National Home for Disabled Volunteer 
Soldiers. 

National Soldiers’ Home P. O. 

Tents Aged and Orphan Home. 

North King St. 

Lynchburg: 

Florence Crittenton Home. 

1803 Taylor St. 

Madison Heights: 

Virginia State Epileptic Colony 10 . 

Norfolk: 

Allmond Home. 

485 Freemason St. 

Church Home. 

417 Bute St. 

Florence Crittenton Home. 

203 Chapel St. 

Lekier Old Folks’ Home and Orphanage_ 

71 Johnson Ave. 

Mary F. Ballentine Home for the Aged. 

Park Ave. 

Restover. 

135 Cumberland St. 

Richmond: 

Baptist Home for Aged Women. 

46 North Harvie St. 

Colored Day Nursery and Home. 

1513 Taylor St. 

Faith Rescue Home. 

108 South Harrison St. 

Home for Needy Confederate Women. 

3 East Grace St. 

Home for the Aged. 

16 North Harvie St. 

Home of the Lord Our Righteousness. 

202 West Broad St. 

Methodist Institute. 

Nineteenth and Grace Sts. 

Negro Baptist Old Folks’ Home. 

508 West Baker St. 

Protestant Episcopal Church Home. 

1621 Grove Ave. 

R. E. Lee Camp No. 1, Soldiers’ Home. 

Boulevard and Grove Ave. 

Richmond Home for Ladies. 

515 North Seventh St. 

Spring Street Home. 

601 Spring St. 

Virginia Home for Incurables. 

Robinson and Broad Sts. 

Rock Castle: 

Institute of St. Francis de Sales for Colored 
Girls of the South. 

Timberville: 

Old Folks’ Home. 


Private association 


Benevolent and Protective 
Order of Elks, U. S. A. 

U. S. Government. 


Fraternity organization 


National Florence Critten¬ 
ton Mission. 

State of Virginia. 

Private corporation (M. E. 
Church, South). 

Private corporation (Epis¬ 
copal). 

National Florence Critten¬ 
ton Mission. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private organization. 


Private corporation (Bap¬ 
tist). 

Christ Mission Workers. 

Private organization. 

Private corporation. 

Little Sisters of the Poor.... 

Private organization. 

Private corporation (Metho¬ 
dist). 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation (Epis¬ 
copal). 

R. E. Lee Camp No. 1, Con¬ 
federate V eterans. 

Private corporation. 

Magdalen Association. 

Private corporation. 


Sisters of the Blessed Sacra¬ 
ment. 

Church of the Brethren_ 


Homeless aged women. 


Aged members of the Order 
of Elks. 

Disabled volunteer soldiers 
and sailors. 

Homeless aged members and 
their orphans. 

Fallen women and their in¬ 
fants. 


Epileptics. 

Aged members of the church 
Aged Episcopalian women. 
Fallen girls and their infants 

Indigent aged women. 

Aged women. 


Stranded strangers (young 
women). 


Aged Baptist women. 


Homeless working girls, de¬ 
serted children, and orphans 
Fallen girls and their infants. 

Widows, sisters, and daugh¬ 
ters of Confederate veterans. 
Destitute aged persons. 


Repentant fallen women and 
their children. 

Homeless men and other 
needy persons. 

Aged persons. 


Aged Episcopalian women... 
Virginia Civil War veterans.. 
Indigent aged women. 


Fallen women and their in¬ 
fants. 

Incurables.. 


Colored girls for industrial 
and literary training. 

Indigent aged members of 
the church. 


1896 
1903 
1865 

1897 

1898 

1911 

1S79 

1878 

1897 

1884 
1896 
1909 

1881 

1907 
1906 

1898 

1874 
1902 
1898 

1908 

1875 

1885 
1883 
1872 
1S94 

1898 

1892 


Amount of entrance fee asked. 

Amount asked per week. 

Colored persons received. 

Paid employees at close of 1 

year. 

INMATES RECEIVED 
DURING YEAR. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 



Yes. 

27 

24 

24 


( J ) 


No. 

7 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( ! ) 

$300 


No. 

2 

2 


2 

60 


Yes. 


27 


27 


$2.50 

Yes. 

13 

64 

35 

29 



Yes. 

6 

2 

1 

1 

*650 


No. 


4 


4 

300 


No. 

2 

1 


1 

(«) 


No. 

1 

2 


2 


No. 







No. 

21 

20 

20 




Yes. 

495 

565 

565 




( 8 ) 

3 

2 


2 

25 


No. 


15 


15 










No. 

1 

2 

1 

1 



No. 

3 




35 

u 10.00 

No. 

3 

91 


91 

* 75 


(8) 

1 

2 


2 



No. 

10 

2 


2 



No. 

2 

36 


36 

100 

u 6.25 

No. 

4 

2 


2 


(») 

Yes. 

1 

359 

150 

209 



No. 


10 


10 

(“) 


No. 

4 

2 


2 


Yes. 


33 

17 

16 



No. 


50 


50 



No. 

7 

5,000 

5,000 


25 


Yes. 

2 

3 

1 

2 

200 


No. 

7 

8 


8 



No. 

40 

84 

84 


200 


No. 

5 

2 


2 

35 


No. 

2 

54 


54 

200 


No. 

8 

3 

1 

2 


1.15 

Yes. 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


( 3 ) 



No. 

4 

18 

4 

14 


i Includes $8,825 from U. S. Government. 

* Varies according to age. 

8 Not reported. 

* Includes report of St. Joseph’s Orphanage. 


* Average of maximum and minimum amounts. 
6 Residents $200; nonresidents $500. 
i From U. S. Government. 

8 Colored only. 































































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


253 


OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN: 1910-Continued. 


INMATES PRESENT AT CLOSE OF YEAR. 


RECEIPTS 

DURING 

YEAR. 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

i 

Institution number. 

Adults. 

Children. 

Total. 

Derived from— 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

Total. 

£ 

'cS 

a 

£ 

'3 

a 

fa 

Permanently 

dependent. 

Temporarily 

dependent. 

Wav ward or 
delinquent. 

C3 

O 

fa 

£ 

s 

£ 

a 

a 

a> 

fa 

Orphan or de¬ 

pendent. 

Received with 

parent. 

Delinquent. 

Appro- 

pri- 

ations. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources. 

99 

99 


99 









$21,521 

i $20,825 



$696 

*‘>0 043 

«1Q Q61 


*50 000 

*50 000 


1 

21 

4 

17 

21 









(*) 

< 8 ) 

( 8 > 

( 8 > 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

30,500 

22,500 

$8,000 

2 

7 


7 

7 









(»> 


w 

(») 

( s ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

(») 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

(») 

3 

(*) 


( 3 ) 



(*) 







(»> 

( s ) 

(») 

(») 

(») 

(•) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 


(») 

4 

45 

18 

27 

45 



208 

105 

103 

208 



( 3 ) 


( 3 ) 

(») 

( 8 ) 


(3) 



( 3 ) 


5 

16 

8 

8 

16 









5,564 


$5 564 

\ / 

4 655 

3 935 

720 

V / 

(3) 

40,000 


6 

20 


20 

20 









( a ) 

( 8 > 

( 8 ) 

(») 

(») 

(•) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

\ J 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

\ J 

( 8 ) 

7 

10 


10 

10 









1,798 


679 


1 119 

1 436 

1 436 


26,019 

4,800 

21,219 

8 

6 


6 

6 









1,037 


837 


200 

975 

975 


17,272 

6,000 

11,272 

9 

3 


3 

3 









77 


23 


54 

41 

41 


1 

55 

55 


55 









27,568 


27,568 


27,568 

27,568 


80,000 

■ 80,000 


2 

2,183 

2,183 


2,183 









468,245 

M54,117 


14,128 

505,811 

376,428 

129,383 

1,507,957 

1,507,957 


3 

6 


6 

6 









837 

837 



611 

441 

170 

3,000 

3,000 


4 

12 


12 



12 







1,535 

600 

•789 

$24 

122 

1,107 

1,107 

5,000 

3,000 

2,000 

5 


















6 

7 

1 

6 

7 









900 




900 

900 

900 


15,000 

15,000 


7 

6 


6 

6 









( s ) 


( 8 > 


(*) 

(») 

(>) 

( 8 ) 

c 8 ) 

(») 

(•) 

8 
















30 


30 



30 







( s ) 


( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

(») 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 8 ) 

(*) 

9 

4 


4 

4 









( 8 ) 


310 

(») 

471 

396 

75 

3,000 

3,000 

10 

28 


28 

28 









43,820 



43,820 

14,784 

12,278 

2,506 

754,879 

50,000 

704,879 

11 













( 3 ) 




(*) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

12 

19 


19 

19 









2,983 


189 

1,073 

1,721 

2,813 

2,813 

51,000 

25,000 

26,000 

13 

10 


10 


10 


25 

10 

15 

25 



748 


702 

46 

876 

876 


3,000 

3,000 

14 

10 


10 


2 

N 

4 

j 

2 

2 


4 


274 


120 


154 

274 

274 



15 

27 


27 

27 









14 2,300 

300 

14 2,000 



2,750 

2,750 


15,000 

15,000 


16 

130 

64 

66 

130 









7,364 


3,832 


3,532 

7,202 

7,202 


89,978 

89,978 


17 

19 


19 



19 

6 

( a ) 

c) 


6 


( 8 ) 


( 8 ) 


(») 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( s ) 

( 3 ) 

( s ) 

(•) 

18 

55 

55 



55 






3,607 


3,607 


3,560 

3,560 

11,500 

11,500 

19 

12 

2 

10 

12 









1,354 


1,354 



1,259 

1,259 


10,000 

10,000 


20 

22 


22 

22 









13,353 


3,000 


10,353 

11,546 

6,750 

4,796 

220,000 

55,000 

165,000 

21 

286 

286 


286 









52,791 

46,333 

4,701 


1,757 

50,125 

48,103 

2,022 

200,000 

200,000 


22 

18 

18 

18 









15,383 

10,000 

400 

4,983 

4,162 

3,655 

507 

102,876 

8,094 

94,782 

23 

18 


18 



18 







1,755 

500 

249 

515 

491 

5,562 

1,710 

3,852 

35,000 

r 

25,000 

10,000 

24 

30 

10 

20 

30 









9,100 

1,000 

6,000 

600 

1,500 

6,500 

6,000 

500 

80,000 

50,000 

30,000 

25 

140 


140 


140 








( 8 ) 

(*) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

26 

16 

1 

15 

16 









1,300 


500 

800 

1,300 

1,200 

100 

.22,000 

11,000 

11,000 

27 


9 Includes $508, value of donations other than cash. ^ Nursery charge 10 cents per day; dormitory, 50 cents per week. 

Not opened until 1911. 13 All property owned, 

ii Per month: no weekly charge. 14 Exclusive of donations other than cash. 




































































































































































































Institution number. 


254 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table III.—HOMES FOR THE CARE OF ADULTS 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 


9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 
19 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 


1 


2 

3 

4 

5 

6 


7 

8 


NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised or conducted 
by- 



Amount of entrance fee asked. 

Amount asked per week. 

Colored persons received. 

Paid employees at close of 

year. 

INMATES RECEIVED 
DURING YEAR. 

Class of inmates received. 

© 

*0 

3 

a 

05 

© 

"oj 

-+J> 

o 

EH 

© 

© 

*c3 

a 

© 

Ph 

WASHINGTON. 











Bellingham: 











Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

Salvation Army. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 

1908 



C 1 ) 

2 

10 

10 


1311 J St. 








Orting: 











State Soldiers’ Home. 

State of Washington. 

Veterans and militiamen.... 

1891 



Yes. 

72 

168 

168 


Seattle: 








Florence Crittenton Home of Seattle. 

National Florence Critten- 

Fallen women and their in- 

1886 



Yes. 

2 

60 


60 

Dunlap P. O. 

ton Mission. 

fants. 








House of the Good Shepherd. 

Sisters of the Good Shep- 

Erring women and orphans.. 

1890 



No. 

2 

110 


110 

Fiftieth St. and Suhnyside Ave. 

herd. 







Lebanon Home. 

Pacific Coast Rescue and 

Fallen women. 

1908 


$2.50 

Yes. 

4 

112 


112 

1110 West Sixty-fifth St. 

Protective Society. 





Ryther Child Home. 

Private organization. 

Working women and their 

1883 


1.25 

Yes. 

5 

175 

75 

100 

1262 Dennyway. 


children. 




Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

Salvation Army. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 

1904 



0) 

10 

70 

70 


Nipth Ave. and Holgate St. 








Samuel and Jessie Kenney Presbyterian 

Private corporation. 

Homeless aged men and 

1901 


( 6 ) 

No. 

9 

14 

2 

12 

Home. 


women. 





Lincoln Beach (P. O. Box 1872). 











Spokane: 











Florence Crittenton Home. 

National Florence Critten- 

Fallen girls and their infants. 

1899 

( 7 ) 


No. 

2 

75 


75 

2335 Crescent Ave. 

ton Mission. 






House of the Good Shepherd. 

Sisters of the Good Shep- 

Erring inebriate girls. 

1905 



No. 

3 

50 


50 

Wabash Ave. and Lidgerwood St. 

herd. 







Maria Beard Deaconess Old People’s Home.. 

Methodist Episcopal Chinch. 

Impoverished aged persons.. 

1889 

$300 

8 4.50 

Yes. 

2 

6 

5 

1 

1905 East Wellesley Ave. 











Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

Salvation Army. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 

1905 



(>) 

3 

37 

37 


13 East Main Ave. 







Salvation Army Rescue Home. 

Salvation Army. 

Fallen women and dependent 

1905 



Yes. 

4 

204 


204 

1411 East Thirteenth Ave. 


children. 






Tacoma: 











Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

Salvation Army. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 

1905 



0 

4 

57 

57 


1954 Jefferson Ave. 









White Shield Home. 

Woman’s Christian Tern- 

Fallen girls and their infants. 

1S88 

30 


Yes. 

2 

45 


45 

4214 North Huson St. 

perance Union. 




Vancouver: 











House of Providence. 

Sisters of Charity of Provi- 

Homeless old men, orphans, 

1S56 


3.00 

Yes. 

6 

161 

52 

109 

Tenth St. and Reserve. 

dence. 

and boarding pupils. 



Walla Walla: 











Northwestern Home (Aged Department). 

Northwestern Christian 

Aged and indigent members 

1909 

100 


No. 

4 

3 


3 


Benevolent Association. 10 

of the Christian Church. 







Odd Fellows’ Home of Washington. 

Independent Order of Odd 

Odd Fellows, their orphans, 

1897 



No. 

8 

6 

5 

i 

534 Bover Ave. 

Fellows. 

and Rebekahs. 





Stubblefield Home. 

Trustees of J. L. Stubble- 

Homeless widows and indi- 

1902 



No. 

6 

2 

2 



field Endowment. 

gent orphans. 








WEST VIRGINIA. 











Elkins: 











West Virginia Odd Fellows’ Home 12 . 

Independent Order of Odd 

Odd Fellows and their fami- 

1910 



No. 






Fellows. 

lies. 









Elm Grove: 











Florence Crittenton Home. 

National Florence Critten- 

Fallen women and deserted 

1893 



No. 

1 

35 

6 

29 


ton Mission. 

wives with their infants. 





Wheeling: 











House of the Good Shepherd. 

Sisters of Our Ladv of Char- 

Wayward' girls and unpro- 

1899 



Yes. 


75 


75 

Edington Lane. 

ity of Refuge. 

tected children. 







Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

Salvation Army. 

Homeless unemployed men.. 

1908 



0) 

3 

103 

103 


1043 Chaplfne St. 







West Virginia Home for Aged and Friend- 

Private corporation. 

Aged women and homeless 

1887 

300 

3.00 

No. 

4 

32 


32 

less Women. 


unemployed girls. 





37 Thirteenth St. 





1 






WISCONSIN. 











Farmington: 











Wisconsin Veterans’ Home. 

G. A. R., Department of 

Civil War veterans, their 

1886 


(12) 

Yes. 

117 

186 

117 

69 


Wisconsin. 

wives, widows, mothers, 




and Army nurses. 









Fond du Lac: 











Henry Boyle Catholic Home for the Aged.... 

Sisters of St. Agnes. 

Aged men and women. 

1893 


3.00 

No. 

5 

3 

1 

2 

East Arndt and Park Aves. 









Home of the Friendless. 

Private corporation.. 

Horn cl ass, destitute aged 

1872 

8 175 

11 10.00 

No. 

4 

7 

R 


101 Arndt St. 


persons. 





Green Bay: 











House of the Good Shepherd. 

Sisters of Our Lady of Char- 

Destitute,wayward,or home- 

1882 


8 1.50 

Yes. 

4 

70 


70 

Polier and Webster Aves. 

ity of Refuge. 

less girls, aged women, and 





Odd Fellows’ Home. 

Independent Order of Odd 

unprotected children. 

Odd Fellows and their fami- 

1890 



No. 

7 

5 

3 

2 


Fellows. 

lies 







St. Marv’s Mothers’ and Infants’ Home. 

Sisters of Misericorde. 

Erring women and their in- 

1901 


3.00 

Yes. 

24 

248 

75 

173 

403 Webster Ave. 


fants, and abandoned chil- 




dren. 









La Crosse: 











Home for the Friendless. 

Private corporation. 

Homeless women and ohil- 

1888 


2.00 

Yes. 

2 

27 

15 

12 

Eleventh St. 


dren. 



Manitowoc: 











St. Mary’s Asylum. 

Felician Sisters. 

Aged persons and orphans... 

1888 

(15) 

3.00 

No. 

2 

17 

Q 

8 

Twentieth and Division Sts. 





1 No rule against admissions. 

2 Equipment. 

3 Includes $36,025 from U. S. Government. 
1 Cash value of donations. 


3 Not reported. 

6 Varies. 

2 Confinement fee, $50, if able. 

3 Average of maximum and minimum amounts. 



























































































































GENERAL TABLES 


255 


OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


INMATES PRESENT AT CLOSE OF TEAR. 


RECEIPTS 

DURING 

TEAR. 


PATMENTS DURING 

TEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

institution number. | 

Adults. 

Children. 

Total. 

Derived from— 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

Total. 

a 

© 

■a 

a 

<x> 

Permanently 

dependent. 

Temporarily 

dependent. 

Wayward or 
delinquent. 

13 

o 

© 

'a 

a 

© 

*3 

l 

© 

Orphan or de¬ 

pendent. 

Received with 
parent. 

Delinquent. 

Appro¬ 

pri¬ 

ations. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources. 

2 

2 



2 








$1,643 




$1,643 

81,689 

$1,614 

$75 

2 $356 

2 $356 


i 

690 

690 


690 









3 78,125 

»$78,125 



66,995 

63,736 

3,259 

62,892 

62,892 


2 

30 


30 



30 

19 

9 

10 

19 



6,874 

3,580 

4 §2,959 

$335 


4,071 

3,570 

501 

50,000 

50,000 


3 

115 


115 



115 

100 


100 

100 



(6) 

( s ) 

(s) 

( 6 ) 

(‘) 

(») 

(*) 

(‘) 

(•) 

4 

13 


13 



13 







1 ; 420 


1,100 

190 

130 

1,392 

1,392 



5 

13 


13 


13 


71 

41 

30 


71 


5,700 

1,200 

2,000 

2,500 


5,000 

4,500 

500 

10,000 

10,000 


6 

16 

16 



16 








12,573 


12,573 

11,593 

11,593 


2 2,406 

2 2,406 


7 

35 

8 

27 

35 









24,217 


224 

490 

23,503 

29,409 

25,671 

3,738 

468,835 

411,860 

$56,975 

8 

19 


19 



19 

16 

( s ) 

( 6 ) 

16 



4,818 

1,285 

2,276 

1,196 

61 

4,835 

4,835 

12,000 

12,000 


9 

68 


68 



68 





10,220 

1,020 

2,000 


7,200 

10,150 

10,000 

150 

50,000 

50,000 


10 

9 

1 

8 

9 









2,299 

1,192 

1,107 

1,944 

1,886 

58 

6,500 

6,500 


11 

4 

4 



4 








4,82S 




4,828 

3,927 

3,873 

54 

2 1,004 

2.1,004 


12 

20 


20 



20 

ii 

8 

3 

11 



3,421 

1,251 

1,126 

951 

93 

3,378 

3,378 


1,400 

1,400 


13 

5 

5 



5 






4,466 



4,466 

4,635 

4,326 

309 

2 807 

2 807 


14 

9 


9 



9 

6 

3 

3 


6 


2,385 

1,000 

203 

1,182 


2,171 

2,071 

100 

6,000 

6,000 


15 

7 

7 


6 

1 

» 101 

47 

54 

9 101 



37,863 

423 

13,422 

24,018 

37,763 

21,779 

15,984 

450,000 

450,000 


16 

3 


3 

3 






( s ) 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

(») 

(‘) 

(») 

00 

u 20,000 

(*) 

17 

16 

14 

2 

16 

3 



22 

10 

12 

22 



12,800 

12,800 

12,678 

12,678 


150,000 

150,000 


18 

3 

3 



22 

8 

14 

22 



9,400 


200 


9,200 

7,000 

4,800 

2,200 

184,000 

75,000 

109,000 

19 

1 

3 


3 



3 

4 

1 

3 


4 


1,500 


1,500 



1,500 

1,500 


3,500 

3,500 


2 

125 


125 



125 


40 

35 

75 





1,500 


( 6 ) 

56,767 

50,767 

6,000 

100,000 

100,000 


3 

15 

15 


15 




5,531 




5,531 

5,828 

5,828 


2 818 

2 818 


4 

19 

19 

19 








5,100 


3,900 


1,200 

3,700 

3 700 


34,000 

10,000 

24,000 

5 

AQO 

366 

333 

699 









129,175 

116,447 

12,728 



130,654 

124,849 

5,805 

350,000 

350,000 


i 

IQ 

5 

14 

19 









( 5 ) 

( 6 ) 

(») 

00 

00 


00 


C) 

2 

22 

13 

9 

21 

1 








3,00S 

192 

74 

2,219 

523 

2,314 

2,188 

126 

19,812 

15,000 

4,812 

3 

70 

70 

45 


25 

90 


90 

32 

36 

22 

28,294 

312 

290 

2,411 

25,281 

28,294 

20,394 

7,900 

75,000 

75,000 


4 




OQ 



26 

14 

12 

26 





17,555 

4,687 



11,326 

11,326 


76,612 

65,000 

11,612 

5 

OA 


96 



26 

159 

75 

84 

159 



11,023 


5,473 

863 

16,987 

7,950 

9,037 

45,000 

45,000 


6 




4 


14 

5 

8 

14 



1,883 


169 

438 

1,276 

1,350 

1,350 

. 

18,450 

5,000 

13,450 

7 

31 

5 

26 

31 



58 

58 

58 



5,418 

464 

l 

2,428 

960 

1,566 

5,588 

4,829 

759 

50,000 

50,000 

. 

8 


s Includes boarding pupils. 

10 Auxiliary to National Benevolent Association of Christian Church, 
u Includes value of Northwestern Home (Orphan Department), Walla Walla, 
u Not in operation in 1910. 


is Varies according to amount of pension received, 
n Per month; no weekly charge, 
is For adults, $12 per month. 
























































































































































































































Institution number. 


256 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table III.—HOMES FOR THE CARE OF ADULTS 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


WISCONSIN—Continued. 


9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 
17' 

18 

19 

20 
21 

22 

23 


Milwaukee: 

Downer Home. 

7 Prospect Ave. 

Home for the Aged. 

2000 Wells St. 

House of the Good Shepherd. 

5010 North Ave. 

Layton Home for Incurables. 

Twenty-first and State Sts. 

Milwaukee Home for the Friendless. 

378 Van Buren St. 

Milwaukee House of Mercy. 

Fifty-fourth and Cedar Sts. (Wauwa¬ 
tosa). 

Milwaukee Protestant Home for the Aged... 
Bradford St. and Downer Ave. 

Milwaukee Rescue Mission. 

National Home for Disabled Volunteer Sol¬ 
diers. 

National Home P. O. 

St. John’s Home for the Aged. 

640 Cass St. 

Salvation Army Industrial Home. 

43 Juneau Ave. 

Oshkosh: 

Old Ladies’ Home. 

Racine: 

J. H. Palmeters Old Ladies’ Home. 

College ave. and Sixteenth St. 
Sheyboygan: 

Home for the Friendless. 

721 Ontario Ave. 

Stoughton: 

Norwegian Lutheran Old People’s Home.... 


24 


1 


Wittenberg: 

Homme Orphan Home and Home for the 
Aged. 

WYOMING. 

Buffalo: 

Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Home. 


Supervised or conducted 
by— 


Private corporation (Pres¬ 
byterian). 

Little Sisters of the Poor.... 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd 

Institution of Protestant 
Deaconesses. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 


Private corporation 

Private corporation 
U. S. Government. 


Private corporation (Epis¬ 
copal). 

Salvation Army. 


Ladies Benevolent Society.. 
Private corporation. 


Private organization 


Synod for Norwegian Luth¬ 
eran Church. 

United Norwegian Luther¬ 
an Church. 


State of Wyoming 



Aged ministers and their 
wives. 

Destitute aged persons. 


Fallen women and unpro¬ 
tected children. 

Noncontagious incurables 

Homeless women and chil¬ 
dren. 

Dependent or fallen women 
and their infants. 

Impoverished aged persons... 

Homeless men. 

Disabled volunteer soldiers 
and sailors. 

Aged Episcopalian women... 

Homeless unemployed men.. 


1888 

1876 

1877 
1907 

1867 
1894 

1884 

1893 

1865 

1868 
1899 


Aged women. 

Aged gentlewomen 


1879 

1891 


Homeless women and unpro¬ 
tected children. 

Aged members of the church. 
Aged persons and orphans.... 


1894 

1900 

1882 


Honorably discharged U. S. 
volunteers. 


1896 


Amount of entrance fee asked. 

Amount asked per week. 

Colored persons received. 

Paid employees at close of 

year. 



No. 

3 



No. 



$2.00 

No. 

5 


2 10.00 

Yes. 

7 



Yes. 

3 


( 3 ) 

Yes. 

4 

$500 


No. 

12 



Yes. 

15 



Yes. 

465 



No. 

5 



( 6 ) 

8 

250 


No. 

3 

2 300 


No. 

5 



Yes. 

1 



No. 

28 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

No. 

14 



Yes. 

5 






INMATES RECEIVED 
DURING YEAR. 



© 

'3 

0J 


a 

o 


© 


s 


58 

37 

21 

44 

24 

20 

63 


63 

22 

11 

11 

194 

43 

151 

38 


38 

10 

2 

8 

18,000 

18,000 


731 

731 


120 

120 


1 


1 

0) 


0) 

39 

16 

23 

12 

5 

7 

22 

13 

9 

12 

10 

2 


1 Not reported. 


2 Average of maximum and minimum amounts. 


* According to ability to pay. 

















































































GENERAL TABLES 


257 


OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN: 1910—Continued. 


INMATES PRESENT AT CLOSE OF YEAR. 


RECEIPTS 

DURING 

YEAR. 


Adults. 

Children. 

Total. 

Derived from— 

Total. 

© 

*08 

a 

Female. 

Permanently 

dependent. 

Temporarily 

dependent. 

W ay ward or 
delinquent. 

*3 

O 

© 

a 

Female. 

Orphan or de¬ 

pendent. 

Received with 

parent. 

Delinquent. 

Appro¬ 

pri¬ 

ations. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
in¬ 
mates. 

Other 

sources. 

2 

i 

1 










S3,860 




$3,860 

200 

100 

100 

200 









(l) 


( l ) 


103 


103 

IS 


So 

63 


63 

63 



29,641 

S3,036 

SI,969 

$301 

24,335 

30 

12 

IS 

30 









9,482 

4,000 

5,177 

305 

1 


1 

1 



1 

i 


1 



3,040 


2,349 


691 

19 


19 


3 

16 

11 


11 

10 

1 


32,372 


31,699 

673 


84 

17 

67 

84 









15,441 


4,572 


10,869 

300 

300 



300 








7,500 


4,000 

3,500 

1,848 

1,848 


1,848 









356^222 

4 348,200 

8,022 

IS 

18 

18 









5,012 

2,000 


3,012 

20 

20 



20 





• 



6,50C 



6,500 

IS 


18 

18 









6,566 


1,716 


4,850 

8 


8 

8 









4,596 


680 


3,916 

1 


1 


1 


1 


1 

1 



639 


594 

45 

38 

20 

IS 

38 









7,401 


3,468 

850 

3,083 

38 

18 

20 

38 



80 

48 

32 

80 



15,000 



5,000 

10,000 

53 

44 

9 

53 









14,919 

14,919 














4 From U. S. Government. 6 No rules against admission. • Equipment. 


44153°—14-17 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

C 1 ) 

$3,000 

c i ) 

$95,000 

$45,000 

$.50,000 

9 

( l ) 

( i > 


(1) 

c) 


10 




*26,937 

25,235 

$1,702 

55,000 

55,000 


11 

8,788 

8,788 


75,000 

70,000 

5,000 

12 

2,783 

2,783 


16,000 

15,000 

1,000 

13 

43,753 

3,242 

40,511 

65,000 

65,000 


14 

19,777 

19,777 


309,600 

100,000 

209,600 

15 

84,200 

8,000 

76,200 

76,200 

76,200 


16 

342,808 

332,809 

9,999 

1,465,156 

1,465,156 


17 

4,333 

4,333 


82,000 

15,000 

67,000 

18 

6,749 

6,499 

250 

« 1,233 

«1,233 


19 

3,959 

3,773 

186 

39,475 ! 

22,000 

17,475 

20 

4,186 

4,186 


93,555 

43,000 

50,555 

21 

723 

723 





22 

9,860 

9,860 


74,000 

70,000 

4,000 

23 

15,000 

12,500 

2,500 

50,000 

50,000 


24 

14,919 

14,912 


15,000 

1 

15,000 


1 






7 And all property owned or acquired. 







































































































































































Institution number, 


258 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table IV.— HOSPITALS AND 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


Supervised or conducted by— 


Class of cases treated. 


ALABAMA. 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 

9 

10 

11 


Birmingham: 

Hillman Hospital. 

600 Twentieth St. 

St. Vincent’s Hospital. 

Mount St. Vincent. 

Fort Morgan: 

U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

Mobile: 

City Hospital. 

St. Anthony and Broad Sts. 

Providence Infirmary. 

512 Springhill Ave. 

U. S. Marine Hospital. 

850 St. Anthony St. 

Montgomery: 

Emergency Hospital. 

Fresh Air Camp «. 

Upper Wetumpka Road. 

St. Margaret’s Hospital. 

Adams and Jackson Sts. 

Selma: 

Burwell’s Infirmary i . 

1429 Philpot St. 

Vaughan Memorial Hospital... 
103 Union St. 


Jefferson County. 
Sisters of Charity 


U. S. Government. 

City of Mobile and Sisters of 
Charity. 

Sisters of St. Vincent de Paul 
U. S. Government. 


City of Montgomery. 

Montgomery Anti-tubercu¬ 
losis League. 

Sisters of Charity. 


Private individual. 
Private corporation 


General, except contagious.. 
General. 

General. 

General, except contagious.. 

General. 

General. 

General. 

Tubercular. 

General, except contagious.. 

General, except contagious.. 
General. 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 


ARIZONA. 

Bisbee: 

Calumet and Arizona Hospital 8 ... 
P. O. box 1177. 

Copper Queen Hospital. 

Clifton: 

Clifton Accident Benevolent So¬ 
ciety Hospital. 10 
Fort Apache: 

U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

Fort Defiance: 

Hospital of the Good Shepherd.... 

Fort Huachuca: 

U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

Phoenix: 

St. Joseph’s Hospital. 

Fourth and Polk Sts. 

St. Luke’s Home. 

Prescott: 

Mercy Hospital. 

206 Grove St. 

U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

Whipple Barracks. 

Tucson: 

St. Mary’s Hospital and Sanato¬ 
rium. 

Winslow: 

Santa Fe Emergency Hospital 12 .. 
ARKANSAS. 


Calumet & Arizona Mining 
Co. 

Copper Queen Consolidated 
Mining Co. 

Clifton Accident Benevolent 
Society. 

U. S. Government. 

Private corporation (Epis¬ 
copal). 

U. S. Government. 

Sisters of Mercy. 

Protestant Episcopal Church. 

Sisters of Mercy. 

U. S. Government. 


Sisters of St. Joseph, 


Santa Fe Coast Lines Hospi¬ 
tal Association. 


General. 

General. 

General, except contagious.. 

General. 

General. 

General. 

General. 

Tubercular. 

General. 

General. 

General. 

General. 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 

9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 


Booneville: 

Arkansas Tuberculosis Sanatorium 

Eureka Springs: 

Hotel Dieu. 

Magnolia St. 

Fort Smith: 

Sparks Memorial Hospital. 

916 South Twelfth St. 

Hot Springs: 

Army and Navy General Hospital. 
Reserve Ave. 

Barry Hospital 11 . 

4 Water St. 

Hot Springs Emergency Hospital. 

St. Joseph’s Hospital. 

1 Cedar St. 

Jonesboro: 

St. Bernard’s Hospital. 

224 East Matthews Ave. 

Little Rock: 

Battle Creek Sanitarium. 

1223 Wolfe St. 

Logan H. Roots Memorial Hospital 
119 Sherman St. 

Pest House. 

St. Vincent’s Infirmary. 

Tenth and High Sts. 

U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

Fort Logan H. Roots. 

Quinton: 

St. Paul’s Hospice and Sanitarium. 
Armstrong Springs P. O. 

Texarkana: 

Cotton Belt Hospital 12 . 

Dudley Ave. 


State of Arkansas. 

Sisters of Mercy. 

Private corporation. 

U. S. Government. 

Drs.Wm. H.and L. H. Barry. 

City of Hot Springs. 

Sisters of Mercy. 

Sisters of St. Benedict. 


Seventh Day Adventists.... 

Private organization. 

City of Little Rock. 

Sisters of Charity of Naza¬ 
reth. 

U. S. Government. 


Paulist Brothers 


St.Louis Southwestern Rail¬ 
way Co. 


Incipient tubercular. 

General. 

General, except contagious.. 

General. 

General. 

Smallpox. 

General. 

General, except contagious.. 

General, except chronic and 
contagious. 

General. 

Smallpox. 

General. 

General. 

Kidneys, liver, and stomach. 
General. 


Year founded. 

Training school for 

nurses. 

Colored patients re¬ 

ceived. 

Number of beds. 

MEDICAL STAFF 
AT CLOSE OF 
YEAR. 

NURSES AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 

Total. 

Resident. 

Visiting. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

1888 

Yes. 

Yes. 

90 

20 

5 

15 

' 24 


24 

1900 

Yes. 

Yes. 

150 

24 

3 

21 

35 


35 

1899 

( 3 ) 

Yes. 

25 

1 

1 

. 

4 

< 4 


1830 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

27 

2 

25 

12 

3 

9 

1852 

Yes. 

No. 

85 

11 

1 

10 

20 


20 

1842 

No. 

Yes. 

50 

2 

2 


2 

2 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

1 C) 1 1 

No 

Yes 

14 







1902 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

1QQ7 

No 

Yes 

11 







1890 

Yes. 

No. 

35 

9 


9 

12 


12 

1902 

No. 

Yes. 

30 

3 


3 

4 

1 

3 

1903 

No. 

Yes. 

100 

1 7 

1 

!6 

11 

3 

8 

1899 

No. 

Yes. 

30 

7 

7 


3 


3 

1870 

( 3 ) 

Yes. 

12 

1 

1 


5 

<5 


1894 

No. 

No. 11 

20 

1 


1 

2 


2 

( 2 ) 

( 3 ) 

Yes. 

36 

1 

1 


10 

1 10 


1895 

Yes. 

Yes. 

75 

10 


10 

20 


20 

1907 

No. 

( 2 ) 

36 

8 


8 

2 


2 

1890 

No. 

Yes. 

40 

10 


10 

10 

10 


1902 

No 

No 

10 

1 


1 




1880 

No. 

Yes. 

85 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

21 

4 

17 

( 2 ) 

No. 

Yes. 

( 2 ) 

2 

2 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

1910 

No. 

No. 

74 

2 

2 


3 


3 

1901 

No. 

No. 

20 

8 


8 

1 


1 

1901 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

( 2 ) 

10 

( 2 ) 

15 


15 

1883 

( 3 ) 

Yes. 

122 

4 

4 


61 

<55 

6 

1889 

No. 

Yes. 

40 

6 

2 

4 

3 

3 


1895 

No. 

Yes. 

56 

( 2 ) 

1 

( 2 ) 

2 

1 

1 

1886 

Yes. 

No. 

( 2 ) 

8 


8 

12 


12 

1900 

No. 

Yes. 

60 

17 


17 

7 

1 

6 

1900 

Yes. 

Yes. 

35 

3 

1 

2 

14 

2 

12 

1895 

Yes. 

Yes. 

30 

14 

4 

10 

7 


7 

( 2 ) 

No. 

Yes. 

30 

1 


1 




1888 

Yes. 

Yes. 

150 

15 


15 

40 


40 

1896 

( 3 ) 

Yes. 

14 

1 

1 


3 

* 3 


1909 

No. 

Yes. 

80 

5 

2 

3 

4 


4 

1887 

No. 

Yes. 

150 

12 

4 

1 

8 

10 

5 

5 


1 Includes report of dispensary. 

2 Not reported. 


2 Instruction for Hospital Corps. 
* Enlisted men, Hospital Corps. 


8 Exclusive of out-patients. 
6 Not opened until 1911. 


2 Colored; closed during 1910. 
8 Mining employees. 






















































































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


259 


SANITARIUMS: 1910. 


PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING YEAR. 

PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE 

OF YEAR. 


Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Adults 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

Total. 

1,680 

800 

880 

87 

40 

47 

75 

12 

i $27,600 

2,011 

1,105 

906 

102 

68 

34 

102 


( s ) 

304 

304 


17 

17 


17 


( 2 ) 

1,100 

500 

600 

89 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


( s ) 

681 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

38 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 

* 494 

494 


23 

23 


23 


16,746 

( 2 ) 

' 2 > 

f») 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 

< 2 ) 

( s ) 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

t 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( a ) 

( 2 > 

341 

105 

236 

15 

9 

6 

12 

3 

26,140 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 

44,230 

9 667 

498 

169 

23 

16 

7 

22 

1 

i 80,310 

200 

150 

50 

15 

12 

3 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

38,616 

108 

107 

1 

3 

3 


3 


( 2 ) 

180 

106 

74 

10 

8 

2 

7 

3 

7,000 

150 

150 


12 

12 


12 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

60 

35 

25 

60 


60 

44 

16 

36 

28 

8 

36 


17,237 

220 

200 

20 

15 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

134 

134 







( 2 ) 

350 

302 

48 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


24,000 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


(i3) 

98 

60 

38 

57 

26 

31 

57 


86,689 

264 

82 

182 

10 

3 

7 

10 


( 2 ) 

792 

501 

291 

36 

26 

10 

36 


15,011 

839 

839 


83 

83 


83 


( 2 ) 

105 

105 


27 

27 


27 


( 2 ) 

80 

38 

42 






2.800 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 

523 

379 

144 

15 

10 

5 

15 


5,463 

405 

180 

225 

28 

11 

17 

28 


15,704 

1,246 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

f 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

2.505 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

4.000 

3,691 

3,263 

428 

42 

25 

17 


42 

( 2 ) 

221 

221 


6 

6 


6 


( 2 ) 

240 

155 

85 

15 

12 

3 

15 


11,500 

2,717 

2,717 


52 

52 


52 


i 48,279 


RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 


Derived from- 


Appro- 

pna- 

tlons. 


$27,600 

1,200 

( 2 ) 
7,800 
( 2 ) 

16,746 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


Dona¬ 

tions. 


( 2 ) 


(o 


( s ) 

( 2 > 


Care of 
patients. 


(*) 

( 2 ) 

$400 

( 2 ) 


Other 

sources. 


( 2 ) 


'*) 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


PAYMENTS DURING 

YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. II 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

i $27,600 

$21,600 

$6,000 

1 $150,000 

$150,000 


1 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

75,000 

300,000 

300,000 


2 

( s ) 

( 2 ) • 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 


3 

25,800 

16,800 

9,000 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 

4 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

<*) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

5 

16,746 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 


6 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

7 

8 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 

< 2 ) 

9 







10 

28,000 

11,500 

16,500 

52,000 

40,000 

$12,000 

11 

22,230 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

26,000 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

1 

l 80 310 

80 310 


i 150,000 

150,000 


2 

37,153 

35,944 

1,209 

25,083 

13,765 

11,318 

3 

( 2 ) 

(2) 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


4 

7 000 

7 000 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


5 

(2) 

(2) 

(2) 

( 2) 

( 2 ) 


6 

( 2 ) 

(*) 

\ / 

( 2 ) 

100.000 

100,000 


7 

15,314 

6,976 

8,338 

30,100 

20,000 

10,100 

8 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

n) 

( 2 ) 


9 

(2) 

(2) 

(2) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


10 

23 900 

23 100 

800 

60.000 

60,000 


11 

(13) 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

(13) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

12 

70 071 

20 071 

50 600 

60 000 

60,000 


1 

( 2 ) 

5,900 

( 2 ) 

10,000 

10,000 


2 

16,369 

16.369 


54.000 

54.000 


3 

m 



(2) 

( 2 ) 


4 

V, J 

1 525 

V. / 

(2) 

v J 

(2\ 

2 500 

2,500 


5 

2 800 

2 500 

300 

3 500 

3,500 


6 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

7 

6,712 

6,712 


25,000 

25.000 


8 

14 403 

9 885 

4 518 

35,000 

35,000 


9 

11 885 

11 283 

602 

27,000 

27,000 


10 

4 000 

4.000 


8,200 

8,200 


11 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 

( s ) 

12 

(2) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


13 

) 8,000 

6,000 

2,000 

50.000 

50,000 


14 

) M8,279 

45,956 

2,323 

i 150,000 

150,000 


15 


$12,500 


9,276 

2,468 


( 2 ) 


7.000 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


80,000 


2,500 

( 2 ) 


2,800 


68 


4,000 
( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

5,785 

40 


5,669 

( 2 ) 

95; 


( 2 ) 

■(*)" 


200 


( 2 ) 


13,640 

( 2 ) 

7,168 

2,574 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


33,574 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

4,307 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

24,000 


( 2 ) 

7,1 

( 2 ) 


1,020 

6,000 

11,554 

( 2 ) 

250 
*?2j‘ 

5,085 

15,704 
2,505 


( 2 ) 


25 


110 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

7,500 


( 2 ) 


9 Exclusive of 47,492 disr>ensary patients. 

10 Includes report of branch at Metcalf, same county. 


u Indians exclusively. 
Railway employees. 


Included in report of Santa Fe Hospital at Los Angeles, Cal 
14 Men only. 










































































































































































































260 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table IV.— HOSPITALS AND 


2 

a 

3 

a 

3 

o 


1 

2 

3 

4 


5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 
19 


20 

21 

22 

23 

24 

25 


26 

27 


28 

29 

30 

31 

32 

33 


NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of cases treated. 

Year founded. 

Training school for 

nurses. 

Colored patients re¬ 

ceived. 

Number of beds. 

MEDICAL STAFF 
AT CLOSE OF 
YEAR. 

NURSES AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 

o 

-+-> 

0 

o> 

TJ 

*55 

a> 

Pi 

W) 

3 

4-» 

s 

> 

73 

-*-> 

o 

© 

s 

73 

a 

© 

fe 

CALIFORNIA. 













Alcatraz: 













U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

(») 

( 2 ) 

Yes. 

34 

2 

2 


9 



Angel Island": 











U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1863 

( 2 ) 

Yes. 

32 

5 

5 


5 

* 5 


Fort McDowell. 












Angels Camp: 













U tica Hospital 4 . 

Utica Gold Mining Co... 

General. 

1888 

No. 

Yes. 

6 

1 


1 

1 

1 


Eureka: 













Humboldt County Receiving Hos- 

County of Humboldt. 

Supposed insane awaiting 

1910 

No. 

No. 

6 

6 17 

17 


2 

1 

l 

pital. 


examination. 











Fourth and J Sts. 













Los Angeles: 













Barlow Sanatorium. 

Private corporation. 

Pulmonary tubercular 

1902 

No. 

No. 

42 

5 

1 

4 

4 


4 

Chavez Ravine Road. 













Children’s Hospital 6 . 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1901 

No. 

Yes. 

34 

9 


9 

8 


8 

769 Castelar St. 












French Hospital. 

French Benevolent Society 

General, except contagious.. 

1860 

No. 

No. 

30 

2 


2 

3 


3 

913 Castelar St. 

of Los Angeles. 











German Hospital. 

German Hospital Society.... 

General, except contagious.. 

1903 

Yes. 

No. 

23 

22 

1 

21 

10 


10 

453 South Soto St. 











Highland Park Sanatorium. 

Private individual. 

Tubercular. 

C 1 ) 

No. 

No. 

20 

2 


2 

2 


2 

5605 Hub St. 












Homer Toberman Deaconess 

Methodist Episcopal Church, 

General, except contagious.. 

1903 

No. 

No. 

10 

25 


25 

4 


4 

Home and Hospital. 

South. 












1036 Sunset Boulevard. 













Hospital of the Good Samaritan... 

Protestant Episcopal 

General, except contagious.. 

1887 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

0) 


0) 

59 


59 

934 West Seventh St. 

Church. 












Kaspare Cohn Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1902 

Yes. 

No. 

45 

4 


4 

12 


12 

3742 Stephenson Ave. 













Los Angeles College of Osteopathy 

Los Angeles College of Oste- 

General, except contagious 

1905 

Yes. 

Yes. 

27 

19 

6 

13 

12 

1 

11 

Hospital. 

opathy. 

and infectious. 











318 Clay St. 













Los Angeles Infirmary. 

Sisters of Charity. 

General. 

1859 

Yes. 

Yes. 

150 

22 

2 

20 

47 

2 

45 

Beaudry Ave. and Sunset 













Boulevard. 













Methodist Hospital. 

Woman’s Home Missionarv 

General, except contagious 

1909 

No. 

Yes. 

19 

40 

0) 

(>) 

12 

6 

6 

2826 South Hope St. 

Society, M. E. Church. 

and infectious. 











Quarantine Hospital. 

City of Los Angeles. 

Smallpox. 

1868 

No. 

Yes. 

26 







Chavez Ravine Road. 













Receiving Hospital. 

City of Los Angeles. 

Emergency. 

1887 

No. 

Yes. 

12 

4 

4 


5 

3 

2 

108 South Hill St. 













Santa Fe Hospital 7 . 

Santa Fe Coast Lines Hos- 

General. 

1904 

No. 

Yes. 

70 

(') 

4 

0) 

11 

3 

8 

Sixth and*St. Louis Sts. 

pital Association. 










Women’s Alliance Maternity Cot- 

Unitarian Church. 

Maternity. 

1907 

Yes. 

No. 

7 

(*) 


0) 

1 


1 

tage. 











127 South Utah St. 













Mentone: 













Mentone Sanatorium. 

Private corporation. 

Tubercular... 

1901 

No. 

No. 

24 

5 


5 

2 

1 

1 

Needles: 













Santa Fe Emergency Hospital 7 ... 

Santa Fe Coast Lines Hos- 

General. 

1907 

No. 

Yes. 

0) 

2 

2 


(>) 

(>) 

(*) 

pital Association. 








Oakland: 













Alameda County Receiving Hos- 

County of Alameda. 

Emergency. 

1881 

No. 

Yes. 

15 

9 

9 


2 


2 

pital. 













Fifth and Franklin Sts. 













Fabiola Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1877 

Yes. 

Yes. 

125 

104 

2 

102 

47 

2 

45 

Moss Ave. and Broadway. 












Providence Hospital. 

Sisters of Providence. 

General. 

1902 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

71 

1 

70 

45 

2 

43 

Twenty-sixth St. and Broad- 













way. 













Samuel Merritt Hospital. 

Private organization. 

General, except contagious.. 

1909 

Yes. 

Yes. 

75 

5 

2 

3 

44 


44 

Webster St. and Hawthorne 












Ave. 













Pasadena: 













La Vina Sanatorium. 

Private corporation. 

Tubercular. 

1909 

No. 

Yes. 

39 

3 

1 

2 

4 


4 

R. D. 1. 













Pasadena Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1899 

Yes. 

Yes. 

96 

45 


45 

42 


42 

Fairmont "Ave. and Congress 












Sacramento: 













Mater Misericordiae Hospital. 

Sisters of Mercy.... 

General, except contagious.. 

1895 

Yes. 

Yes. 

90 

0) 

1 

(■) 

34 

2 

32 

Twenty-third and RSts. 







Receiving Hospital. 

City of Sacramento. 

Emergency. 

1884 

No. 

0) 


2 

2 


1 


1 

Front and I Sts. 












St. Helena: 













St. Helena Sanitarium. 

Seventh Day Adventists.... 

General, except contagious 

1878 

Yes. 

Yes. 

150 

4 

4 


56 

18 

38 


or infectious". 









San Bernardino: 













Santa Fe Emergency Hospital 7 — 

Santa Fe Coast Lines Hos- 

General. 

1907 

No. 

Yes. 

( l ) 

2 

2 


(») 

(») 

0) 

pital Association. 








San Diego: 













St. Joseph’s Hospital and Sani- 

Sisters of Mercy. 

General. 

1890 

Yes. 

0) 

60 

30 


30 

ii 

2 

9 

tarium. 










University Ave. 













U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

0) 

( 2 ) 

Yes. 

14 

2 

2 


8 

3 8 


Fort Rosecrans. 










' Not reported. 

a Instruction for Hospital Corps, 
a Enlisted men, Hospital Corps. 


4 Mining employees. 

5 For examining patients. 

6 Boys under 12; girls under 14. 




























































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


261 


SANITARIUMS: 1910—Continued. 


PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING YEAR. 


Total. 


422 

1,159! 

150 

39 


103 

483 

136 

226 

(0 

148 

1,952 

223 

257 

1,010 

230 

26 

5,000 

923 

78 

37 

0) 

0) 

1,656 

1,133 

m 

62 

1,469 

1,325 

956 

1,200 

0) 

600 

100 


Male. 


422 

1,159 

150 

30 

62 

0) 

93 

109 

( l ) 

24 


1,010 


34 


0) 

P) 


422 


P) 

(0 


0) 


PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 


RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 


Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Adults 

Chil¬ 

dren. 


13* 

13 


13 



16 

16 


16 



3 

3 


3 


9 






41 

38 

22 

16 

38 


(*) 

o 


(*) 



43 

12 

7 

5 

11 

1 

117 

11 

5 

6 

11 


C 1 ) 

124 

2 

1 

1 

2 


7 

7 

7 


1,302 

65 

21 

44 

65 


118 

30 

13 

17 

30 


170 

17 

P) 

18 

7 

( l ) 

4 

10 

0) 

14 

1 

14 

P) 

18 

3 

P) 

170 

10 

1 


1 


500 





33 

50 

50 


50 


78 

7 

7 

7 


3 

12 

10 

2 

12 



(•) 

(») 

<*> 

(>) 


(>) 

(») 


0) 

0) 

0) 

1,017 

53 

20 

23 

41 

12 

523 

76 

31 

45 

48 

28 

569 

33 

16 

17 

31 

2 

32 

946 

30 

57 

14 

16 

30 


(>) 

(*) 

(>) 

(>) 

0) 

(0 

GO 

( i ) 

0) 

(>) 

o 






700 

71 

0) 

60 

30 

0) 

25 

41 

64 

P) 

58 

7 

400 

35 

2 


9 

9 


9 







Total. 


Derived from— 


0 ) 

0) 

$4,500 

P) 

23,906 
12,512 
12,063 
12,731 

P) 

5,225 

91,714 

10,364 

8,933 

91,449 

19,500 
1,175 
18,000 
8 102,506 
2,587 

5,747 

( 9 ) 

0) 

82,287 

34,665 

70,076 

25,725 
57,237 

59,900 

P) 

115,003 

m 

202,000 

P) 


Appro¬ 

pria¬ 

tions. 


P) 

P) 




$600 


Dona¬ 

tions. 


P) 


1,175 

18,000 


300 


900 


P) 


0) 


P) 


$8,847 
6,388 
100 
10 
P) 

1,015 

3,150 
7,109 


Care of 
patients. 


13,666 

12,000 


102,506 

530 

1,213 

( 9 ) 

P) 

3,113 

560 


22,000 

3,246 


0) 


( 9 ) 


0) 

P) 


$8,974 
509 
3,127 
7,322 

P) 

4,012 

87,851 

755 

4,140 

76,871 

7,500 


Other 

sources. 


616 


2,340 


P) 

76,039 
34,105 

46,176 

3,725 
51,92’ 

58,000 
0) 

115,003 


202,000 

0) 


$4,500 


6,085 
5,015 
8,836 
5,399 
0) 

198 

713 

2,500 

4,793 

912 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 


1,141 

1,294 


0) 

3,135 


23,900 


2,064 

1,900 
0) 


Total. 


P) 

0) 

$4,500 

0) 

24,479 
12,425 
11,345 
13,052 
0) 

5,169 

87,506 
10,447 
8,834 

83.725 

19,500 
1,175 
18,000 
8 85,971 
2,235 

0) 

( 9 ) 

P) 

80,558 

P) 

73,939 

25.725 
60,629 

59,700 
0) 

81,951 

( 9 ) 

200,000 
P) 


For 

running 
ex¬ 
penses. 


P) 

0) 

$4,000 

0) 

17,394 

8,590 

11,345 

12,052 

0) 
5,098 

86,160 
10,447 
7,834 

83,725 

10,000 

1,175 

18,000 

0) 
1,691 

5,308 

P) 

0) 

78,558 
34,225 

69,207 

12,160 
60,629 

57,000 

0) 

77,370 
0) 
200,000 
0) 


For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 


0) 

P) 


$500 


7,085 

3,835 


1,000 

P) 

71 

1,346 


1,000 


9,500 


(}) 

544 

0) 

0) 


0) 

2,000 

0) 

4,732 

13,565 


VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 


2,700 

P> 

4,581 

P) 


Total. 




0) 


P) 

P) 

* 

0) 


$300 


158,672 
236,000 
48,900 
36,000 
0) 
12,000 

287,271 

52,000 

85,000 

0) 

30,000 
50,000 
1,500 
0) 
2,027 

16,020 
0) 

P) 

115,000 
192,500 

760,000 

68,000 

245,851 

P) 

P) 

232,992 

0) 

200,000 
0) 


Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 


P) 

0) 

$300 

0) 

106,644 
225; 000 
42,000 
30,000 

P) 

12,000 

287,271 
52,000 
60,000 

200,000 

30,000 
50,000 
1,500 
8 100,000 
2,027 

11,020 

( 9 ) 

0) 

100,000 

173,000 

260,000 

65,000 

213,351 

P) 

0) 

188,104 

( 9 ) 

200,000 

P) 


In¬ 

vested 

funds. 


$52,028 
11,000 
6,900 
6,000 
0) 


25,000 

P) 


0) 


5,000 

0) 

0) 

15,000 

19.500 

500,000 

3,000 

32.500 

0) 

0) 

44,888 

P) 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 
21 

22 

23 

24 

25 

26 

27 

28 

29 

30 

31 

32 

33 


i Railway employees. . . 

8 Includes report of all hospitals and dispensaries conducted by the association. 
»Included in report of Santa Fe Hospital at Los Angeles, Cal. 








































































































































































































262 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table IV.— HOSPITALS AND 


Institution number. 

NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of cases treated. 

Year founded. 

Training school for 

nurses. 

Colored patients re¬ 

ceived. 

Number of beds. 

MEDICAL STAFF 
AT CLOSE OF 
YEAR. 

NURSES AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 

o 

e* 

a 

© 

2 

\n 

© 

£ 

3 

> 

2 

■4-3 

o 

e* 

© 

s 

. ® 

<3 

a 

© 

fa 


CALIFORNIA—Continued. 














San Francisco: 














Central Emergency Hospital 


Emergency.. 

1895 

No. 

Yes. 

30 

.3 

3 


3 


3 


Golden Gate Ave. and Gough 













25 

O L • 

Children’s Hospital. 

Private corporation.. 

General. 

1875 

Yes. 

Yes. 

140 

16 

1 

15 

39 


39 


3700 California St. 













36 

City and County Hospital. 

City and County of San 

General. 

1853 

Yes. 

Yes. 

450 

72 

12 

60 

44 

7 

37 

' Ingleside. 

Francisco. 












27 

Francisca Maternity Hospital.... 

Private corporation.. 

Maternity. 

1868 

Yes. 

Yes. 

9 

7 

1 

6 

4 


4 


2835 Clement St. 














French Hospital. 

French Benevolent Society. 

General, except bubonic 

1851 

Yes. 

Yes. 

225 

9 

7 

2 

50 


50 


Geary St. 

plague. 











39 

German Hospital. 

German General Benevo- 

General. 

1854 

Yes. 

Yes. 

220 

42 

14 

28 

79 

4 

75 

Fourteenth and Noe Sts. 

lent Society. 












40 

Hahnemann Hospital. . 

Private corporation _ 

General, except contagious.. 

1896 

Yes. 

Yes. 

120 

32 

2 

30 

32 


32 


Maple and California Sts. 













41 

Harbor Emergency Hospital 

City of San Francisco 

Emergency. 

1895 

No. 

Yes. 

7 

3 

3 


3 


3 


7 Clay St." 













42 

Insane Detention Hospital. 

Citv of San Francisco 

Supposed insane awaiting 

1895 

No. 

Yes. 

8 

2 


2 

3 


3 

Golden Gate Ave.'and Gough 


examination. 











43 

kJ V. 

Isolation Hospital. 

City and County of San 

Smallpox, leprosy, and 

1909 

No. 

Yes. 

100 

1 


1 

2 

1 

1 

Army and Do Haro Sts. 

F'rancisco. 

plag'ue. 











44 

Lane Hospital. 

Cooper Medical College 

General, except contagious.. 

1893 

Yes. 

Yes. 

175 

16 

8 

8 

70 


70 

Clay and Webster Sts. 












45 

Letterman General Hospital (U. S. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1898 

No. 

Yes. 

400 

15 

15 


38 


38 

Army). 














Presidio. 













46 

Mission Emergency Hospital. 

City of San Francisco 

Emergency. 

1895 

No. 

Yes. 

4 

3 

3 


(») 

0) 

(t) 

Twenty-third St. and Potrero 













Ave. 













47 

Mount Zion Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1887 

Yes. 

No. 

56 

18 

2 

16 

30 


30 

2341 Sutter St. 













48 

Park Emergencv Hospital. 

City of San Francisco. . 

Emergency. 

1895 

No. 

Yes. 

4 

3 

3 


(!) 

0) 

0) 

Golden Gate Park. 











49 

Potrero Emergency Hospital. 

Citv of San Francisco. 

Emergency. 

1895 

No. 

Yes. 

4 

3 

3 


(>> 

0) 

0) 

1152 Kentucky St. 










50 

St. Joseph’s Hospital. 

Franciscan Sisters of the Sa- 

General, except contagious.. 

1899 

Yes. 

Yes. 

150 

12 

2 

10 

38 

3 

35 


Buena Vista Ave. 

cred Heart. 












51 

St. Luke’s Hospital. 

Private corporation (Epis- 

General. 

1871 

Yes. 

Yes. 

96 

17 

5 

12 

44 


44 

Twenty-seventh and Valencia 

copal). 













Sts. 













52 

St. Mary’s Hospital. 

Sisters of Mercy. 

General, except contagious.. 

1854 


Yes. 

84 

8 

8 


35 

2 

33 

2200 Hayes St. 












53 

Southern Pacific Company’s Hos- 

Southern Pacific Co. 

General. 

1S68 

No. 

Yes. 

250 

11 

5 

6 

26 

(>) 

( l ) 

pital. 7 












Hayes and Baker Sts. 













54 

U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

U. S. Government__ 

General. 

0) 

( 8 ) 

Yes. 


7 

7 


( 9 ) 

( 9 ) 


Presidio. 









55 

U. S. Marine Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1849 

No. 

Yes. 

200 

4 

4 


10 

10 


Presidio. 













56 

University of California Hospital.. 

University of California_ 

General. 

1907 

Yes. 

Yes. 

75 

40 

5 

35 

27 


27 

Second and Parnassus Aves. 














San Jose: 













57 

O’Connor Sanitarium. 

Sisters of Charity. 

General. 

1889 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

17 


17 

32 

2 

30 

Race and San Carlos Sts. 


} 












San Mateo: 













58 

Red Cross Hospital. 

St. Matthew’s Protestant 

General. 

1908 

No. 

Yes. 

20 

6 


6 

6 


6 

Baldwin Ave. 

Episcopal Church. 













Santa Barbara: 













59 

St. Francis Hospital. 

Sisters of St. Francis. 

General. 

1908 

Yes. 

Yes. 

30 

8 


8 

7 


7 

East Arrellaga St. 













60 

Santa Barbara Cottage Hospital... 

Private association. 

General, except tubercular .. 

1888 

Yes. 

Yes. 

30 

0) 


(') 

12 


12 

Oak Park. 










Sausalito: 













61 

U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1900 

( 8 ) 

No. 

19 

2 

2 


5 

9 5 


Fort Baker. 












62 

U. S Army Post Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1908 

( 8 ) 

Yes. 

22 

1 

1 


9 

9 9 


Fort Barry. 













Stockton: 













63 

Stockton City Emergency Hos- 

City of Stockton. 

Emergency. 

1905 

No. 

(•) 

10 

1 

1 


3 

1 

2 

pital. 













North San Joaquin St. 













64 

St Joseph’s Hospital. 

Sisters of St. Dominic. 

General, except contagious 

18S9 

Yes. 

Yes. 

40 

16 


16 

21 

1 

20 

California St*. 


and insane.' 











Vallejo: 













65 

U S Naval Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1898 

No. 

Yes. 

260 

4 

4 


38 

28 

10 

Mare Island.* 












Ventura: 










• 



66 

Elizabeth Bard Memorial Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious 

1903 

No. 

No. 

19 

5 


5 

3 


3 

609 Fir St. 


and tubercular. 












COLORADO. 














Aspen: 













1 

Citizen’s Hospital. 

Private association. 

General, except contagious.. 

1890 

No. 

Yes. 

20 

1 

i 


3 


3 

Boulder: 












2 

Boulder Colorado Sanitarium. 

Seventh Day Adventists’ 

General, except contagious.. 

1895 

Yes. 

No. 

85 

3 

3 


36 

12 

24 


Third St. and Mapleton Ave^ 

Conference. 










3 

University Hospital. 

University of Colorado. 

General. 

1898 

Yes. 

Yes. 

40 

8 


8 

12 


12 


University St. 













1 Not reported. 4 Included in report of Central Emergency Hospital. 

2 Includes report of entire Emergency Hospital Service of San Francisco, Cal. 6 Includes report of dispensary. 

3 Owned by City of San Francisco. 6 Includes report of St. Joseph’s Home for Aged and Infirm. 









































































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


263 


SANITARIUMS: 1910—Continued 


PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING YEAR. 

PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE 

OF YEAR. 


Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Adults 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

Total. 

11,609 

9,319 

2,290 

G) 

G) 

0) 

0) 

(■) 

2 $59,600 

1,371 

450 

921! 

95 

53 

42 

27 

68 

SO, 825 

2,771 

2,243 

528 

410 

341 

69 

400 

10 

126,496 

106 


106 

7 


7 

i 


4,162 

1,776 

1,207 

569 

150 

G) 

(■) 

G) 

0) 

138,627 

2,654 

G) 

G) 

140 

(■) 

G) 

G) 


186,618 

940 

160 

780 

76 

26 

50 

64 

12 

61,000 

5,850 

5,662 

1 88 






( 4 ) 

690 

403 

287 






( 4 ) 

58 

55 

3 

19 

19 


19 


19,280 

3,119 

1,654 

1,465 

130 

58 

72 

110 

20 

106,449 

3,103 

2,937 

166 

263 

256 

7 

263 


0) 

2,816 

2,335 

481 






( 4 ) 

1,119 

543 

576 

37 

24 

13 

32 

5 

5 41,565 

1,524 

1,426 

98 






( 4 ) 

3,199 

2,944 

255 






( 4 ) 

6 1,314 

876 

438 

150 

79 

71 

125 

25 

8 73,825 

1,367 

912 

455 

55 

36 

19 

55 


74,300 

1,294 

0) 

(>) 

73 

g> 

g> 

0) 

G) 

G) 

2,000 

1,967 

33 

142 

140 

2 

142 


G) 

0) 

(l) 

G) 






0) 

10 1,138 

1,138 

67 

67 


67 


49,531 

1,011 

674 

337 

65 

40 

25 

65 


5 44,018 

1,041 

541 

500 

61 

28 

33 

56 

5 

43,805 

363 

180 

183 

9 

3 

6 

G) 

G) 

24,752 

260 

115 

145 

23 

15 

8 

20 

3 

11,157 

276 

119 

157 

12 


12 

12 


16,826 

483 

483 


1 

1 


1 


0) 

255 

255 







( l ) 

1,751 

1,645 

106 

4 

3 

1 

4 


3,040 

900 

450 

450 

46 

23 

23 

42 

4 

u 29,000 

0) 

G) 

G) 

225 

225 


225 


o 

81 

32 

49 

5 

3 

2 

4 

1 

5,438 


56 

7 

3 

3 


3 


7,121 

1,000 

400 

600 

29 

15 

14 

29 


47,104 

250 

108 

142 

23 

10 

13 

23 


o 


7 Railway employees. 

8 Instruction for Hospital Corps. 

9 Enlisted men, Hospital Corps. 


RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 


Derived from— 


Appro¬ 

pria¬ 

tions. 


$59,600 


126,496 


0) 

0) 

19,100 
9,000 
( l ) 

0 ) 


0 ) 

( 4 ) 


( l ) 


( l ) 
49,531 


0 ) 

0 ) 

3,040 


0) 


Dona¬ 

tions. 


$34,163 


430 


2,585 


13,473 
4,962 

0) 

0) 


500 

656 

5,182 

2,584 

1,600 


67 


Care of 
patients. 


$38,439 


3,703 

52,982 

138,666 

61,000 


180 
97,449 
0) 


28,279 


50,878 

63,638 

0) 


0) 


36,223 

43,149 

12,847 

8,573 

14,536 

0) 

0) 


29,000 

0) 

3,752 

1,483 

47,037 

10,267 


Other 

sources. 


$8,223 


29 

85,645 

47,944 


0) 


10,701 


9,474 

5,700 

0 ) 


7,295 


6,723 


690 


1,686 

5,638 

0) 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

| Institution number. 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

2 $59,600 

$59,600 


(!) 

0) 


34 

203,329 

71,181 

$132,148 

$389,759 

$300,000 

$89,759 

35 

126,496 

126,496 


3 1,000,000 

1,000,000 


36 

4,265 

4,077 

188 

30,000 

30,000 


37 

123,673 

111,673 

12,000 

574,962 

394,735 

180,227 

38 

188,287 

188,287 


G) 

G) 

G) 

39 

G) 

60,000 

G) 

186,122 

186,122 


40 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


0) 

0) 


41 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


0) 

0) 


42 

47,960 

19,955 

28,005 

72,097 

72,097 


43 

98,080 

98,080 


200,000 

200,000 


44 

0) 

G) 

G) 

(0 

G) 


45 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


(!) 

0) 


46 

5 43,802 

40,081 

3,721 

5 81,647 

70,242 

11,405 

47 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


0) 

(!) 


48 

( 4 ) 



0) 

0) 


49 

8 68,524 

53,047 

15,477 

8 250,000 

250,000 


50 

67,471 

67,471 


130,000 

100,000 

30,000 

51 


G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

52 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 


53 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 


54 

49,531 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 


55 

5 57,041 

57 041 


5115,650 


115,650 

56 

44 633 

43 067 

1 566 


57 

24,752 

21,314 

3,438 

30,000 

30,000 


58 

10.298 

7,767 

2,531 

84,000 

45.000 

39,000 

59 

14,536 

13,170 

1,366 

65,000 

50,000 

15,000 

60 

G) 

G) 

(0 

G) 

G) 


61 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 


62 

3,275 

3,275 


G) 

30,000 

G) 

63 

n 27,000 

26.000 

1,000 

H25.000 

25,000 


64 

G) 

G) 

G) 

( 1 ) 

G) 


65 

5,363 

5,329 

34 

28,207 

28,207 


66 

7,346 

7,346 


21,000 

20,000 

1,000 

1 

54,308 

49,494 

4,814 

114,274 

114,274 


2 

10.886 

G) 

G) 

20.000 

20,000 


3 


19 Exclusive of out-patients. 

11 Includes report of St. Joseph’s Home, Stockton, Cal. 










































































































































































































264 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table IV.— HOSPITALS AND 


2 

s 

3 

C 

fl 

_o 

-*-a 

3 


4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 
21 
22 

23 

24 

25 

26 


27 

28 

29 

30 

31 

32 

33 

34 

35 

36 

37 

38 

39 

40 

41 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


Supervised orconducted by— 


Class of cases treated. 


COLORADO—Continued. 


Brush: 

Ebenezer Mercy Institute. 

Colorado Springs: 

Bethel Hospital. 

1420 East Boulder St. 

Glockner Sanatorium. 

2200 North Tejon St. 

Modem Woodmen of America 
Sanatorium. 2 
Box 1084. 

Nordrach Ranch Sanatorium. 

St. Francis Hospital. 

East Pike’s Peak Ave. 

Sunnyrest Sanatorium 3 . 

Cripple Creek: 

St. Nicholas Hospital. 

Third St. and Eaton Ave. 

Denver: 

Children’s Hospital. 

2221 Downing St. 

County Hospital. 

Sixth Ave. and Cherokee St. 

Denver Sanitarium and Hospital.. 
3 South Newton St. 

Lare’s Sanitarium. 

4633 Vallejo St. 

Mercy Hospital. 

1619 Milwaukee St. 

Park Avenue Hospital. 

Park Ave. and Humboldt St. 

St. Anthony’s Hospital. 

Sixteenth Ave. and Quitman 
St. 

St. Joseph’s Hospital. 

Eighteenth Ave. and Hum¬ 
boldt St. 

St. Luke’s Hospital. 

Nineteenth and Pearl St. 

Sand Creek Hospital. 

City Hall. 

Steele Memorial Hospital. 

Seventh and Cherokee Sts. 

Sunlight Sanitarium. 

2727 Clay St. 

Durango: 

Mercy Hospital. 

Edgewater: 

Fern Hill Sanatorium. 

West Twenty-sixth St. and 
Sheridan Boulevard. 

Sanatorium of the Jewish Con¬ 
sumptives’ Relief Society. 

Englewood: 

Swedish National Sanatorium. 

3451 South Clarkson St. 

Fort Logan: 

U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

Georgetown: 

St. Joseph’s Hospital. 

Eleventh and Main Sts. 

Grand Junction: 

St. Mary’s Hospital. 

Colorado Ave. and Eleventh St. 

Greeley: 

Greeley Hospital. 

1027 Sixteenth St. 

La Junta: 

Atchison,Topeka & Santa Fe Hos¬ 
pital. 6 

Mennonite Sanitarium. 

R. D. No. 1. 

Las Animas: 

U. S. Naval Hospital. 

Fort Lyon. 

Leadville: 

St. Luke’s Hospital. 

206 East Seventh St. 

St. Vincent’s Hospital. 

Tenth and Hemlock Sts. 

Longmont: 

Longmont Hospital. 

Montclair: 

Agnes Memorial Sanatorium. 

Sixth and Quebec. 

Ouray: 

St. Joseph’s Hospital. 

Pueblo: 

Minnequa Hospital. 

St. Mary’s Hospital.. 

Quincy and Pitkin Sts. 


United Danish Lutheran 
Church. 

Woman’s Home Missionary 
Society of Colorado. 

Sisters of Charity. 

Modem Woodmen of Amer¬ 
ica. 

Private organization. 

Sisters of St. Francis. 

Private corporation. 

Sisters of Mercy. 

Private corporation. 

County of Denver..... 

Private corporation. 

Private organization. 

Sisters of Mercy. 

Denver Homeopathic Col¬ 
lege & Hospital Associa¬ 
tion. 

Sisters of St. Francis. 

Sisters of Charity. 

Protestant Episcopal Church 

City of Denver. 

City of Denver. 

Private corporation. 

Sisters of Mercy. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

U. S. Government. 

Sisters of St. Joseph. 

Sisters of Charity. 

County of Weld. 

Atchison, Topeka & Santa 
Fe Hospital Association. 
Mennonite Board of Missions 
& Charities. 

U. S. Government. 

Private corporation. 

Sisters of Charity. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Sisters of Mercy. 

Colorado Fuel & Iron Co. 

Sisters of Charity. 


General, tubercular a spe¬ 
cialty. 

General. 

General. 

Incipient tubercular. 

Tubercular. 

General. 

Tubercular. 

General. 

General, except chronic and 
contagious. 

General. 

General, tubercular a spe¬ 
cialty. 

Tubercular. 

General. 

General, except contagious.. 

General, except contagious.. 

General, except contagious.. 

General, except contagious.. 

Smallpox. 

Contagious. 

General. 

General. 

Tubercular and insane. 

Pulmonary tubercular. 

Tubercular... 

; 

General. 

General. 

General. 

General. 

General. 

Tubercular and asthmatic... 

Tubercular. 

General. 

General. 

General. 

Incipient pulmonary tuber¬ 
cular. 

General. 

General. 

General. 



U. 

o 

V-. 

o 

I 

9 

Sh 

C/5 

Number of beds. 

MEDICAL STAFF 
AT CLOSE OF 
YEAR. 

NURSES AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 

Year founded. 

Training scho 

nurses. 

Colored patien 

ceived. 

Total. 

Resident. 

Visiting. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

1903 

No. 

Yes. 

28 

3 


3 

5 

2 

3 

1906 

Yes. 

No. 

20 

30 


30 

14 


14 

1889 

Yes. 

Yes. 

150 

G) 


(>) 

29 

1 

28 

1908 

No. 

No. 

180 

4 

4 


5 


5 

1901 

No. 

No. 

60 

2 

1 

1 

2 


2 

1887 

1911 

1894 

No. 

Yes. 

160 

27 

2 

25 

19 

1 

18 

No. 

Yes. 

18 

6 


6 

5 

1 

4 

1910 

Yes. 

Yes. 

36 

18 


18 

11 


11 

1873 

G) 

Yes. 

300 

90 

7 

83 

40 


40 

1903 

No. 

No. 

20 

5 

i 

4 

4 

2 

2 

1902 

No. 

No. 

27 

6 


6 

2 


2 

1901 

Yes. 

Yes. 

110 

53 


53 

38 


38 

1894 

Yes. 

Yes. 

25 

G) 


( 1 ) 

14 


14 

1893 

No. 

Yes. 

135 

52 

4 

48 

39 

3 

36 

1873 

( l ) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

C 1 ) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

1881 

Yes. 

Yes. 

140 

G) 

38 

( l ) 

60 


60 

1885 

No. 

Yes. 

40 

G) 


( l ) 

2 

l 

1 

1885 

No. 

Yes. 

G) 

G) 


G) 

8 


8 

1905 

No. 

No. 

35 

G) 


0) 

4 

l 

3 

1884 

No. 

Yes. 

45 

0) 

G) 

10 

10 

2 

8 

1905 

No. 

No. 

50 

15 

l 

14 

4 

1 

3 

1904 

No. 

Yes. 

110 

28 

2 

26 

8 

4 

4 

1909 

No. 

No. 

36 

28 


28 

2 


2 

1888 

G) 

Yes 

56 

3 

3 


6 

6 6 


1880 

No. 

Yes. 

14 

3 

1 

2 

3 

1 

2 

1896 

Yes. 

Yes. 

35 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

1904 

Yes. 

Yes. 

25 

20 


20 

10 


10 

1881 

No. 

Yes. 

35 

3 

l 

2 

5 

3 

2 

1908 

No. 

Yes. 

37 

1 


1 

3 

1 

2 

1907 

No. 

Yes. 

242 

5 

5 


29 

29 


1905 

Yes. 

Yes. 

19 

3 

3 


4 


4 

1897 

No. 

Yes. 

40 

9 

5 

4 

13 

2 

11 

1906 

Yes. 

Yes. 

15 

G) 

G) 

0) 

8 


8 

1902 

No. 

No. 

150 

6 

6 


10 


10 

1887 

No. 

Yes. 

19 

6 

4 

2 

G) 

G) 

G) 

1881 

Yes. 

Yes. 

210 

31 

8 

23 

35 

l 

34 

1880 

Yes. 

Yes. 

200 

32 

2 

30 

28 

3 

25 


1 Not reported. 


2 For members only. 


3 Not opened until 1911. 


4 Instruction for Hospital Corps. 









































































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


265 


SANITARIUMS: 1910—Continued. 


PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING YEAR. 

PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE 

OF YEAR. 


RECEIPTS DURING 

YEAR. 


PAYMENTS DURING 

YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male, 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Adults 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

Total. 

Appro¬ 

pria¬ 

tions. 

Derived 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

from— 

Care of 
patients. 

Other 

sources. 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build- 

ines, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

78 

58 

20 

25 

21 

4 

25 


*11,332 


*2,703 

*6,337 

*2.292 

*11,332 

*7.806 

*3,526 

*30.000 

*30.000 


328 

128 

200 

11 

5 

6 

11 


13.263 


988 

11,842 

433 

51,302 

11,302 

40,000 

110.000 

110,000 


674 

282 

392 

85 

35 

50 

85 


(') 



( l ) 


(I) 

0) 

(i) 

(i) 

300.000 

(») 

328 

328 


180 

ISO 


0) 

0) 

183.374 


183,374 


161,418 

146,821 

14.597 

221 021 

221.021 

124 

79 

45 

30 

18 

12 

30 

31,716 


31,716 


39,189 

29,189 

1.000 

100,000 

100,000 


1,018 

553 

465 

104 

(>) 

(■) 

0) 

0) 

(>) 

(») 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

( l ) 

198 

100 

98 

6 

5 

1 

6 


<») 

0) 

0) 

0) 

(») 

0) 

(>) 

(»> 

0) 

0) 

(‘5 

179 

26 

153 

24 

11 

13 


24 

9,655 


261 

5,589 

3,805 

11.941 

9,609 

2,332 

20,800 

16,300 

*4,500 

3,673 

2,656 

1,017 

258 

166 

92 

249 

9 

108,323 

*103,015 


5,308 

108,303 

96,533 

11,770 

500,000 

500,000 

56 

49 

7 

11 

9 

2 

11 

4,625 


4,272 

353 

4.625 

4,325 

300 

12.000 

12,000 


71 

65 

6 

17 

14 

3 

17 


(i) 



0) 

(i) 

(i) 

( ] ) 


(i) 

8.000 

( i ) 

2,204 

1,054 

1,150 

100 

43 

57 

91 

9 

0) 

-- (>) 

0) 

0) 

( l ) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

(>) 

0) 

399 

237 

162 

13 

7 

6 

13 


18,482 



18,482 


17,867 

15,606 

2 261 

30.000 

30,000 


1,587 

0) 

0) 

96 

0) 

(») 

0) 


(>) 

0) 

(>) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

(>) 

0) 

(') 

(*) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

(*) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

( l ) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

(») 

0) 

(0 

0) 

(■) 

2,281 

988 

1,293 

101 

47 

54 

101 


99.958 



99,958 


94,649 

94,649 


205,957 

205.957 


226 

0) 

m 

35 

(i) 

m 

m 

m 

3,740 

3,740 



3,740 

3,740 


3.000 

3,000 


0) 

(») 

0) 

(>) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

27,858 

27,858 




27,858 

25,444 

2,414 

65,000 

65.000 


268 

200 

68 

24 

16 

8 

24 


0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

(») 

, (>) 

(') 

0) 

401 

256 

145 

41 

25 

16 

41 


15.000 

(■) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

18,000 

15,000 

3,000 

(0 

(») 

0) 

298 

125 

173 

19 

12 

7 

19 


12 000 



12,000 


12.000 

7.000 

5,000 

30,000 

30.000 


339 

268 

71 

107 

78 

29 

107 


74,924 


64.059 

10,865 

65.552 

60.332 

5,220 

75,000 

75,000 


118 

79 

39 

34 

21 

13 

34 


14,644 


5,837 

8,103 

704 

14.698 

14,376 

322 

20,000 

20,000 


1 000 

999 

1 

28 

28 

28 


(i) 

(1) 

(i) 


(1) 

(i) 

(i) 

0) 

0) 


24 

20 

4 

5 

2 

3 

5 

1 290 

15 

1,125 

150 


1.345 

1,280 

65 

4,000 

4.000 


290 

232 

58 

20 

H 

9 

19 

1 

0) 



0) 


0) 

0) 

(i) 

0) 

0) 

<») 

360 

168 

192 


2 

5 

7 


0) 

0) 



0) 

(i) 

(i) 

0) 

0) 

455 

450 

5 

25 

24 

1 

25 


( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 



( 7 ) 

(i) 

(!) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 



29 

71 

46 

25 

70 

i 

10 227 


7,682 

2,545 


7,027 

5,276 

1,751 

43.000 

43.000 

398 

398 

137 

137 

137 

0) 

(•) 

(>) 

C 1 ) 

(’) 

(>) 

94,213 

(’) 

(>) 

(') 


14ft 

110 

99 


7 

4 

11 


9,374 

2,168 

7,206 

9,374 

8,260 

1,114 

9.000 

9,000 


274 

239 

35 

0) 

(*) 

(0 

0) 

0) 

10.000 



5,000 

5,000 

9,000 

9,000 


20,000 

20,000 


m 

m 


A 

2 

4 

6 


9 105 



8,085 

1,020 

9,117 

8.817 

300 

35.000 

35,000 


\ J 

970 

\) 

108 

\ ) 

172 

140 

75 

65 

140 


128,832 



113,832 

15,000 

132,486 

122,931 

9,555 

703,155 

403,155 

300.000 

208 

182 

26 

9 

6 

3 

9 


(•) 

0) 

(*) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

(*) 

(>) 

(') 

(') 

0) 

1,342 

1,132 

210 

110 

102 

8 

109 

i 

0) 

(>) 

0) 

0) 

(‘) 

0) 

( l ) 

« 

225,000 

0) 

0) 

2,000 

0) 

(') 

90 

53 

37 

84 

6 

<*) 

(*) 

(') 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

(■) 

0) 

(') 

0) 


c Enlisted men, Hospital Corps. 6 Employees. 7 Included in report of Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Hospital, Topeka, Kans. 


U 

M 

a 

3 

a 

3 

o 

*-2 

3 

o 

co 

fi 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 

9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 

21 

22 

23 

24 

25 

26 

27 

28 

29 

30 

31 

32 

33 

34 

35 

36 

37 

38 

39 

40 

41 













































































































































































266 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table IV.—HOSPITALS AND 


o 

a 


3 


a 

tn 

C 


42 


43 


44 

45 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 
21 

22 

23 

24 

25 

26 

27 

28 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


Supervised or conducted by— 


Class of cases treated. 


COLORADO—Continued. 


Salida: 

Denver and Rio Grande R. R. 
Hospital. 1 
First St. 

Red Cross Hospital. 

Third and G Sts. 

Trinidad: 

St. Raphael Hospital. 

Wheatridge: 

Lutheran Sanitarium. 

Edgewater P. O. 


Denver & Rio Grande R. 
R. Co., Employees’ Relief 
Association. 

Private organization.. 


Sisters of Charity. 

Lutheran Augustana Synod. 


General. 

General, except contagious 

General. 

Tubercular. 


CONNECTICUT. 


Bridgeport: 

Bridgeport Hospital. 

267 Grant St. 

Emergency Hospital. 

398 Fairfield Ave. 

St. Vincent’s Hospital. 

2820 Main St. 

Danbury: 

Danbury Hospital. 

Derby: 

Griffin Hospital. 

Seymour Ave. 

Greenwich: 

Greenwich General Hospital. 

Parsonage Road. 

Hartford: 

Hartford Hospital. 

20 South Hudson St. 

St. Francis’ Hospital. 

370 Collins St. 

Wildwood Sanatorium. 

New Britain Ave. 

Meriden: 

Meriden Hospital. 

181 Cook Ave. 

Undercliff Sanitarium for Tubercu¬ 
losis. 

Capitol Ave. 

Middletown: 

Middlesex Hospital. 

28 Crescent St. 

New Britain: 

New Britain General Hospital. 

92 Grand St. 

New Canaan: 

Dr. Brook’s Sanatorium. 

New Haven: 

Grace Hospital. 

1418 Chapel St. 

New Haven Hospital. 

Cedar St., Congress and Daven¬ 
port Aves. 

St. Raphael’s Hospital. 

1442 Chapel St. 

New London: 

Memorial Hospital. 

163 Garfield Ave. 

Norwalk: 

Norwalk Hospital. 

45 Connecticut Ave. 

Norwich: 

William W. Backus Hospital. 

Putnam: 

Day-Kimball Hospital. 


Private corporation. 
City of Bridgeport.. 
Sisters of Charity.... 

Private corporation. 
Private corporation. 

Town of Greenwich. 

Private corporation. 
Sisters of St. Joseph. 
Hartford Hospital... 

Private corporation. 
State of Connecticut. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private individual.. 
Private corporation. 
Private corporation. 

Sisters of Charity... 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 
Private corporation. 


Stamford: 

Stamford Hospital. 

964 Main St. 

Tuberculosis Pavilion 6 . 

R. D. 

Wallingford: 

Gaylord Farm Sanatorium. 

Waterbury: 

St. Mary’s Hospital. 

Franklin St. 

Waterbury Hospital. 

Hospital Ave. 

Willimantic: 

St. Joseph’s Hospital. 

88 Jackson St. 

Winsted: 

Litchfield County Hospital of Win¬ 
chester. 


Private corporation.. 

Town of Stamford. 

New Haven County Anti- 
Tuberculosis Association. 

Sisters of St. Joseph.. 

Private corporation.. 

Sisters of Charity. 

Private corporation. 


General. 

General. 

General, except chronic. 

General. 

General. 

General, except tubercular.. 

General. 

General, except contagious.. 
Pulmonary tubercular. 

General. 

Tubercular. 

General, except venereal.... 

General, except contagious 
and venereal. 

Tubercular. 

General. 

General, except contagious, 
insane, and tubercular. 

General. I . 

General, except contagious 
and incurable. 

General. 

General. 

General, except contagious, 
incurable, and insane. 

General. 

Tubercular. 

Tubercular. 

General, except contagious.. 
General. 

General, except contagious.. 

General. 


Year founded. 

Training school for 

nurses. 

Colored patients re¬ 

ceived. 

Number of beds. 

MEDICAL STAFF 
AT CLOSE OF 
YEAR. 

NURSES AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 

Total. 

Resident. 

Visiting. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

1883 

No. 

Yes. 

50 

4 

2 

2 

7 


7 

1901 

Yes. 

Yes. 

45 

12 

6 

6 

9 


9 

1887 

( 2 ) 

Yes. 

150 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

19 

17 

3 

14 

1904 

No. 

Yes. 

37 

1 

1 


3 


3 

1878 

Yes. 

Yes. 

172 

41 

4 

37 

40 


40 

1886 

No 



3 

3 





1903 

Yes. 

Yes. 

208 

35 

2 

33 

33 

3 

30 

1886 

Yes. • 

Yes. 

60 

3 


3 

23 


23 

1901 

Yes. 

Yes. 

23 

12 


12 

10 

1 

9 

1903 

Yes. 

Yes. 

90 

9 


9 

10 


10 

1854 

Yes. 

Yes. 

375 

54 

9 

45 

96 


96 

1897 

Yes. 

Yes. 

250 

46 

6 

40 

55 


55 

1902 

No. 

Yes. 

48 

1 

1 


4 


4 

1885 

Yes. 

Yes. 

54 

12 


12 

10 


10 

1908 

No. 

Yes. 

111 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

10 

2 

8 

1895 

Yes. 

Yes. 

60 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

15 

18 


18 

1898 

Yes. 

Yes. 

60 

15 


15 

15 


15 

1896 

No. 

No. 

26 

2 

2 


3 


3 

1889 

Yes. 

Yes. 

90 

15 

2 

13 

23 


23 

1826 

Yes. 

Yes. 

220 

38 

8 

30 

64 


64 

1907 

Yes. 

Yes. 

140 

28 

4 

24 

33 

3 

30 

1S92 

Yes. 

Yes. 

60 

16 

1 

15 

13 


13 

1892 

Yes. 

Yes. 

30 

16 


16 

10 


10 

1903 

Yes. 

Yes. 

65 

17 

3 

14 

16 


16 

1894 

No. 

Yes. 

38 

1 


1 

5 


5 

1893 

Yes. 

Yes. 

35 

8 


8 

16 


16 

1909 

No. 

Yes. 

20 

6 

5 

1 

1 


1 

1904 

No. 

No. 

70 

2 

2 


5 


5 

1907 

Yes. 

Yes. 

110 

14 

2 

12 

26; 

2 

24 

1884 

Yes. 

Yes. 

65 

17 

1 

16 

16 


16 

1908 

Yes. 

Yes. 

54 

8 


8 

17 


17 

1901 

Yes. 

Yes. 

52 

4 


4 

12 ' 


12 


1 Employees. 


2 Not reported. 


3 The Employees’ Relief Association receives all income and meets all expenses. 



























































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


267 


SANITARIUMS: 1910—Continued. 


PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING YEAR. 

1 

PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE | 
OF YEAR. 


RECEIPTS DURING 

YEAR. 


PAYMENTS DURING 

YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Adults 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

Total. 

Appro¬ 

pria¬ 

tions. 

Derived 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

from— 

Care of 
patients. 

Other 

sources. 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total* 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

703 

601 

102 

38 

35 

3 

38 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

3 $6.273 


3$25.400 

$25,400 





527 

271 

256 

19 

13 

6 

19 


$23,000 


23,000 


21.000 

18.000 

$3,000 




689 

485 

204 

50 

38 

12 

45 

5 

( 2 ) 

< 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

<•> 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 

116 

82 

34 

29 

19 

10 

29 


25,503 


$9,673 

15,220 

$610 

24,530 

19,285 

5.245 

$35,586 

$35,586 


1,889 

1,034 

855 

91 

56 

35 

76 

15 

98,972 

$27,782 

10,034 

27,782 

33,374 

99,456 

64,370 

35,086 

612,359 

273,600 

$338,759 

1,442 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 






7,015 

7,015 




8,000 

8,000 





1,522 

860 

662 

96 

65 

31 

87 

9 

55,610 

28,507 

2,730 

17,572 

6,801 

55,239 

33,930 

21,309 

400,000 

400,000 


596 

307 

289 

44 

23 

21 

41 

3 

25,292 

9,000 

100 

11,656 

4,536 

28,706 

21,558 

7,148 

140,000 

120,000 

20,000 

317 

180 

137 

16 

9 

7 

16 


15,410 

3,000 

815 

8,432 

3,163 

15,863 

14,112 

1,751 

125,252 

74,292 

50,960 

422 

219 

203 

23 

10 

13 

17 

6 

41,178 

24,626 

4 10,000 

6,406 

146 

19,126 

19,126 


55,000 

45,000 

10.000 

4,475 

2,177 

2,298 

265 

96 

169 

248 

17 

183,957 

18,510 

16,191 

112,025 

37,231 

163,586 

161,929 

1,657 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

771,666 

3,821 

2,100 

1,721 

206 

c) 

( 2 ) 

188 

18 

117,537 

10,496 

1,348 

82,673 

23,020 

117,512 

90,062 

27,450 

153,756 

125,756 

.28,000 

195 

100 

95 

49 

28 

21 

49 


24,966 

4,012 


20,954 


25,487 

25,362 

125 

65,000 

65,000 


450 

248 

202 

28 

20 

8 

24 

4 

15,906 

4,000 


9,696 

2,210 

16,024 

15,357 

667 

119,570 

75,000 

44,570 

184 

121 

63 

97 

65 

32 

95 

2 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 




( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 )- 


496 

240 

256 

33 

16 

17 

29 

4 

20,767 

3,000 

2,255 

12,200 

3,312 

22,379 

22,379 

107,678 

67,025 

40,653 

638 

342 

296 

40 

23 

17 

37 

3 

21,191 

7,000 

606 

12,389 

1,196 

22,718 

20,575 

2,143 

88,420 

80,898 

7,522 

104 

74 

30 

26 

16 

10 

26 


( 2 ) 



( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

641 

305 

336 

57 

28 

29 

54 

3 

54,853 

5,000 

655 

22,186 

27,012 

( 2 > 

35,460 

( 2 ) 

343,152 

150,000 

193,152 

2,606 

1,428 

1,178 

147 

73 

74 

132 

15 

545,642 

15,328 

406,035 

45,356 

78,923 

137,451 

104,426 

33,025 

2,000,000 

500,000 

1,500,000 

1,344 

719 

625 

83 

48 

35 

72 

11 

c 2 ) 

7,500 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

o 

( 2 > 

c 2 ) 

< 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

418 

207 

211 

28 

17 

11 

23 

5 

19,487 

5,000 

2,744 

9,569 

2,174 

18,023 

18,023 


113,721 

63,180 

50,541 

389 

215 

174 

22 

9 

13 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

14,680 

6,131 

1,285 

6,730 

534 

14,893 

14,893 


52,136 

44,000 

8,136 

639 

323 

316 

41 

25 

16 

41 


( 2 ) 



5 9,475 

( 2 ) 

5 26,141 

26,141 


( 2 ) 

5 200,000 

( 2 ) 

410 

220 

190 

19 

7 

12 

17 

2 

23,823 

10,600 

7,354 

4,420 

1,449 

27,407 

8,732 

18,675 

65,372 

40,000 

25,372 

7on 


*360 

30 

14 

16 

30 


24,782 

5,845 

321 

13,044 

5,572 

24,918 

24,918 


231,062 

94,711 

136,351 

96 

IQ 


10 


Q 

in 


4 500 

4,000 


500 

2,000 

2,000 


7,000 

7,000 


221 

103 

118 

64 

32 

32 

64 


44,024 

10,075 

7,634 

22,401 

3,914 

43,312 

39,014 

4,298 

166,000 

140,000 

26,000 

1,466 

801 

665 

77 

31 

46 

64 

13 

36,705 

5,000 

681 

31,024 


37,651 

30,248 

7,403 

115,000 

115,000 



97 6 

9^4 

39 

1 'i 

17 


32 

122,895 

5,000 

4,006 

13,538 

100,351 

24,348 

24,348 


470,816 

350,000 

120,816 

492 

231 

261 

30 

14 

16 

21 

9 

16,732 

4,000 

1,054 

8,249 

/ 

3,429 

12,770 

12,770 





411 

186 

225 

25 

11 

14 

16 

9 

34,901 

•18,000 

657 

10,232 

6,012 

21,720 

19,062 

2,658 

233,494 

75,000 

158,494 


4 Endowments. * Includes report of dispensary. 6 Opened July 1, 1910; statistics for six months. 


sJ 

a> 

£* 

0 

s 

a 

o 

•*-> 

GO 

I—H 

42 

43 

44 

45 

1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

' 8 

9 

i 10 

11 

1 12 

! 13 

14 

\ 15 

> 16 

17 

. 18 

> 19 

20 

\ 21 

22 

23 

) 24 

25 

> 26 

. 27 

i 28 











































































































































Institution number. 


268 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table IV.— HOSPITALS AND 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


Supervised or conducted by— 


DELAWARE. 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 


Delaware City: 

U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

Fort Du Pont. 

Marshallton: 

Hope Farm Sanitarium. 

R. D. 

Wilmington: 

Delaware Hospital. 

Fourteenth and Washington 
Sts. 

Homeopathic Hospital. 

1501 Van Buren St. 

St. Michael’s Hospital for Babies.. 
207 Washington St. 


U. S. Government 


Delaware Anti-Tuberculosis 
Society. 

Private corporation. 


Private corporation. 

Private corporation (Episco- 
. pal). 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 

9 

10 

11 

12 


13 


14 

15 


16 


DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA. 
Washington: 

Casualty Hospitals. 

708 Mass. Ave., NE. 

Children's Hospital. 

Thirteenth and W Sts., NW. 
Columbia Hospital for Women 
and Lying-in Asylum. 
Twenty-fifth St. and Penn. 
Ave., NW. 

Emergency Hospital 6 . 

Fifteenth St. and Ohio Ave., 
NW. 

Episcopal Eye, Ear, and Throat 
Hospital. 

1147 Fifteenth St., NW. 

Freedmen’s Hospital. 

Sixth and Bryant Sts., NW. 

Garfield Memorial Hospital. 

Florida Ave. and Tenth St., 
NW. 

George Washington University 
Hospital. 

1333 H St., NW. 

Georgetown University Hospital.. 

Thirty-fifth and N Sts., NW. 
National Homeopathic Hospital... 
Second and N Sts., NW. 

Providence Hospital. 

Second and D Sts., SE. 

Sibley Memorial Hospital. 

1150 North Capitol St. 
Tuberculosis Hospital of the Dis¬ 
trict of Columbia. 

Fourteenth and Upshur Sts., 
NW. 

U. S. Naval Medical School Hos¬ 
pital. 

Twenty-third and E Sts.,NW. 
Walter Reed U. S. Army General 
Hospital. 

Georgia Ave. and Butternut 
St.. (Takoma Park). 
Washington Barracks Infirmary.. 
Footof Four and a half St., SW. 


Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation.. 

Private corporation (Episco¬ 
pal). 

U. S. Government. 

Private corporation. 

George Washington Univer¬ 
sity. 

Georgetown University. 

Private corporation. 

Sisters of Charity. 

Woman’s Home Missionary 
Society, M. E. Church. 
District of Columbia. 

U. S. Government. 

U. S. Government. 

U. S. Government. 


FLORIDA. 


1 

2 

3 


5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 


Fort Barrancas: 

U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

Fort Dade: 

U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

Gainesville: 

National Odd Fellows’ Sanitarium. 
Jacksonville: 

Duval County Isolation Hospital.. 
Sand Hills. 

St. Luke’s Hospital. 

Duval and Palmetto Sts. 

Key West: 

U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

Key West Barracks. 

U. S. liarine Hospital. 

Ocala: 

Marion County Hospital. 

Orlando: 

Church Home and Hospital. 

Delaney and Anderson Sts. 
Pensacola: 

Escambia County Isolation Hospi¬ 
tal. 

St. Augustine: 

Flagler Hospital. 

Tremerton St. 

Florida East Coast Railway Hos¬ 
pital. 8 
King St. 


U. S. Government. 

U. S. Government. 

Independent Order of Odd 
Fellows. 

State of Florida. 

Private corporation. 

U. S. Government. 

U. S. Government. 

Private corporation. 

Protestant Episcopal Church 
* 

State of Florida. 

Private corporation. 

Florida East Coast Railway 
Co. 


Class of cases treated. 

Year founded. 

Training school for 

nurses. 

Colored patients re¬ 

ceived. 

Number of beds. 

• 

MEDICAL STAFF 
AT CLOSE OF 
YEAR. 

1 

NURSES AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 

Total. 

Resident. 

Visiting. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

General.. 

(i) 

(u 

Yes. 

30 

2 

2 


12 

3 12 


Tubercular... 

1906 

Yes. 

No. 

29 

12 


12 

5 


5 

General. 

1890 

Yes. 

Yes. 

67 

22 

2 

20 

20 


20 

General, except contagious.. 

1888 

Yes. 

Yes. 

65 

25 

1 

24 

14 


14 


1894 


No 

27 

7 


7 

4 


4 

General, except contagious.. 

1888 

No. 

Yes. 

30 

28 

5 

23 

7 


7 

General. 

1870 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

21 

3 

18 

22 


22 

Gvnecological and obstet- 

1866 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

13 

3 

10 

31 


31 

rical. 











General. 

1871 

No. 

Yes. 

46 

65 

5 

60 

14 


14 

Eye, ear, nose, and throat... 

1897 

No. 

Yes. 

45 

4 36 

2 

34 

4 14 


14 

General, except chronic,con- 

1865 

Yes. 

Yes. 

278 

74 

14 

60 

40 


40 

tagious, and incurable. 











General.... 

1882 

Yes. 

Yes. 

225 

32 

8 

24 

45 


45 

General. 

1821 

Yes. 

No. 

104 

82 

5 

77 

40 


40 

General. 

1898 

Yes. 

Yes. 

123 

13 

4 

9 

34 


34 

General. 

1881 

Yes. 

Yes. 

75 

26 

13 

13 

24 


24 

General. 

1861 

Yes. 

Yes. 

335 

36 

8 

28 

63 

8 

55 

General, except chronic, con- 

1890 

Yes. 

Yes. 

75 

188 

1 

187 

4 29 


29 

tagious, and insane. 











Tubercular. 

1908 

No. 

Yes. 

120 

9 

3 

6 

7 


7 

General. 

1905 

No. 

Yes. 

156 

4 

4 


47 

20 

27 

General... 

1909 

No. 

Yes. 

72 

9 

9 


14 

10 

4 

General. 

1909 

( 2 ) 

Yes. 

4 

9 

2 


5 

3 5 


General. 

(I) 

(2) 

Yes. 

28 

l 

1 


9 

3 9 


General. 

1899 

( ! ) 

Yes. 

12 

l 

1 


6 

3 6 


General. 

1890 

Yes. 

No. 

35 

10 


id 

5 


5 

Smallpox. 

1903 

No. 

Yes. 

54 

i 

1 


1 

1 


General. 

1873 

Yes. 

No. 

68 

21 

2 

19 

13 


13 

General. 

1831 

( a ) 

Yes. 

18 

i 

1 


6 

3 6 


General. 

1844 

No. 

Yes. 

25 

1 

1 


2 

2 


General. 

1905 

Yes. 

Yes. 

20 

7 



4 


4 

General. 

1895 

No. 

Yes. 

25 

9 


9 

s 


8 

Contagious. 

1887 

No. 

Yes. 

26 

1 


1 

2 

1 

1 

General, except smallpox ... 

1889 

Yes. 

Yes. 

40 

5 

3 

2 

4 


4 

General. 

1890 

Yes. 

Yes 

75 

3 

2 

1 

10 


10 












1 Not reported. 4 Includes report of dispensary. 

2 Instruction for Hospital Corps. & Includes report of Eastern Dispensary. 

3 Enlisted men, Hospital Corps. 








































































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


269 


SANITARIUMS: 1910—Continued. 


PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING YEAR. 

PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE 

OF YEAR. 


Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Adults 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

Total. 

240 

240 


11 

11 


11 


(i) 

86 

56 

30 

19 

11 

8 

19 


$5,385 

872 

502 

370 

49 

29 

20 

43 

6 

31,131 

514 

218 

296 

34 

13 

21 

29 

5 

4 9,992 

269 

153 

116 

24 

15 

9 


24 

4 6,106 

5,349 

3,587 

1,762 

16 

11 

5 

16 


17,851 

2,306 

1,186 

1,120 

63 

33 

30 


63 

4 145,080 

1,209 


1,209 

36 


36 

36 


4 36,561 

21,179 

18,070 

3,109 

37 

30 

7 

37 


24,800 

3,921 

(>) 

(>) 

20 

10 

10 

13 

7 

4 17,349 

2,869 

1,306 

1,563 

151 

74 

77 

142 

9 

4 69,000 

1,807 

874 

933 

94 

51 

43 

81 

13 

81,958 

1,320 

493 

827 

58 

25 

33 

52 

6 

4 36,574 

1,508 

693 

815 

82 

37 

45 

82 


4 51,096 

931 

249 

682 

31 

8 

23 

31 


45,456 

3,277 

1,892 

1,385 

161 

0 ) 

0 ) 

C) 

0 ) 

0 ) 

1,301 

437 

864 

0 ) 

0 ) 

0 ) 

0 ) 

(>) 

4 36,957 

465 

295 

170 

94 

67 

27 

91 

3 

41,800 

613 

613 


90 

90 


90 


0 ) 

590 

574 

16 

40 

38 

2 

40 


0 ) 

412 

412 


4 

4 


4 


0 ) 

360 

360 


15 

15 


15 


(!) 

131 

131 


5 

5 


5 


(!) 

150 

50 

100 

15 

5 

10 

15 


5,000 

55 

47 

8 

2 

2 


2 


1,455 

942 

591 

351 

38 

25 

13 

31 

t 

7 

24,152 

134 

134 


4 

4 


4 


0 ) 

7159 

159 


14 

14 


14 


13,846 

150 

o) 

0 ) 

10 

5 

5 

10 


3,900 

288 

149 

• 139 

16 

8 

8 

14 

2 

22,153 

1 ^ A 

1 40 

14 

2 

2 


2 


704 

207 

93 

114 

10 

(0 

( i ) 

0 ) 

0 ) 

11,783 

9 2,679 

2,615 

64 

34 

29 

5 

32 

2 

14,997 


RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 


Derived from— 


Appro¬ 

pria¬ 

tions. 


0 ) 


$385 

500 

500 

500 


13,956 

11,759 

18,492 

14,304 


69,000 

27,907 

3,000 

3,000 


Dona¬ 

tions. 


Care of 
patients. 


4 23,000 

41,800 

0 ) 

0 ) 

0 ) 


0 ) 

0 ) 


1,455 

5,000 

0 ) 

13,846 

300 


704 


$4,500 

13,103 

1,789 

1,369 


18,773 


287 

4,849 


1,006 

1,312 

10,647 

0 ) 

6 ,794 


101 


100 

11,055 


620 


Other 

sources. 


0 ) 

$500 

12,359 

5,512 

853 

3,598 

743 

18,069 

9,932 

9,713 


42.863 

32,568 

28,957 

17,406 

0 ) 

28,004 


$5,169 

2,191 
3,384 


294 

113,805 


0 ) 

0 ) 

0 ) 


0 ) 

0 ) 

5,000 


16,506 

0 ) 


3,500 
10,156 


6,384 

14,997 


277 

2,787 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 


VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 


Total. 


11,188 


17,827 

17,403 

0 ) 

2,159 


For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 


2,545 


942 


4,779 


0 ) 

$14,000 

37,481 

4 36,769 
4 5,469 


16,574 
4 143,085 
4 40,445 

27,385 

4 17,675 

4 67,508 
69,609 

4 36,497 

(0 

43,335 

0 ) 

4 31,215 
40,110 

84,219 
0 ) 

0 ) 


C 1 ) 

0 ) 
5,000 

1,455 

28,562 

C 1 ) 

13,846 

4,200 

18,755 

930 

13,169 

16,299 


For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 


(*) 

c) 

$35, Ot 1 

12,319 

4,273 


16,574 

51.609 
37,533 

26,651 

17,675 

67,508 

69.609 

36,497 

4 51,046 
43,335 

0 ) 
29,228 
39,362 

52,157 
0 ) 

0 ) 


0 ) 

0 ) 
4,000 

1,455 

28,562 

0) 

0 ) 
4,200 
12,059 

450 

11,071 

16,299 


0 ) 

(0 

$1,910 

24,450 

1,196 


91,476 

2,912 

734 


0 ) 


0 ) 

1,987 

748 

32,062 

0 ) 

( l ) 


0) 

0 ) 


0 ) 

0 ) 


2,098 


Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

0 ) 

0 ) 


$32,000 

$32,000 


198,631 

94,000 

$104,631 

4 149,312 

125,000 

24,312 

4 12,000 

12,000 


67,983 

67,983 


4 275,000 

275,000 


46,688 


46,688 

4 123,500 

100,000 

23,500 

4 600,000 

600,000 


5,000,000 

5,000,000 


4 360,754 

340,956 

19,798 

0 ) 

0 ) 

(■) 

170,862 

156,300 

14,562 

(>) 

(») 


4 260,000 

260,000 


125,000 

125,000 


0 ) 

0 ) 


(*) 

0 ) 


0 ) 

(') 


(') 

<>) 


0 ) 

(') 


10,500 

10,500 


41,000 

25,000 

16,000 

0 ) 

C 1 ) 


200,000 

200,000 


750 

750 


27,990 

25,000 

2,990 

3,000 

3,000 


84,000 

25,000 

59,000 

30,000 

30,000 

. 


9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 


6 Includes report of Central Dispensary. 

7 Exclusive of out-patients. 


* Employees. 

9 Includes 2,139 dispensary patients. 




















































































































































































































BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


0 


Table IV.— HOSPITALS AND 


( 

NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised or conducted by— 

• 

Class of cases treated. 

Year founded. 

Training school for 
nurses. 

Colored patients re¬ 

ceived. 

Number of beds. 

MEDICAL STAFF 
AT CLOSE OF 
YEAR. 

NURSES AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 

o 

Eh 

S 

S3 

8 

PJ 

ti 

a 

> 

13 

o 

H 

<0$ 

*c3 

3 

oi 

13 

a 

CL> 

Ph 

FLORIDA—Continued. 













Tampa: 













Centro Asturiano Sanatorium. 

Society of the Centro Asturi- 

General. 

1901 

o) 

G) 

(i) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

Euclid and Ola Aves. 

ano.* 










Centro Espanol Sanatorium. 

Centro Espanol de Tampa_ 

General. 

1904 

No. 

No. 

52 

2 

l 

l 

6 

6 


Bay Shore Boulevard. 













Clara Frye Hospital. 

Private organization. 

Typhoid fever and surgical.. 

1907 

Yes. 

0 

25 

(i) 

G) 

10 

5 

2 

3 

1615 'LamahAve. 










Gordon Keller Memorial Hospital 3 

City of Tampa.. 


1910 

Yes. 

No. 

38 

36 

l 

35 

6 


6 

Warrington; 













U. S. Naval Hospital_ 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1875 

No. 

Yes. 

36 

2 

l 

1 

4 

4 


GEORGIA. 













Atlanta: 













City Contagious Disease Hospital 

City of Atlanta... 

Scarlet fever and diphtheria 

1907 

No. 

No. 

35 

3 

l 

2 

2 


2 

* 52 College St. 













Grady Memorial Hospital. 

City of Atlanta. 

General. 

1892 

Yes. 

Yes. 

112 

52 

10 

42 

35 


35 

101 Butler St. 













St. Joseph’s Infirmary. 

Sisters of Mercy. 

General, except contagious.. 

1881 

Yes. 

No. 

100 

20 

2 

18 

55 

3 

52 

284 Courtland St.” 












Tabernacle Infirmary. 

Private corporation. 

General.... 

1903 

Yes. 

No. 

75 

30 

2 

28 

27 


27 

92 Luckie St. 













Wesley Memorial Hospital. 

Methodist Episcopal Church, 

General. 

1905 

Yes. 

No. 

47 

36 

3 

33 

24 


24 

129 Courtland St. * 

South. 












Augusta: 













Augusta City Hospital 

University of Georgia.. 


1866 

Yes. 

No. 

70 

18 

3 

15 

19 


19 

”553 Walker St.” 


and insane. ” 











Lamar Hospital. 

University of Georgia for 

General. 

1895 

Yes. 

G) 

125 

18 

3 

15 

16 

1 

15 

409 Hale St. 

City of Augusta. 











Brunswick: 













Brunswick Hospital. 

(i). 

(i). 

1905 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

First Ave. and Norwich St. 







Camp Yonah: 













Camp Yonah Sanatorium. 

Private individual. 

Tubercular.. 

1907 

No. 

No. 

20 

l 

1 


2 


2 

Columbus: 













City Hospital. 

City of Columbus. 

General, except contagions 

1893 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

l 

1 


5 


5 

Fifteenth St. and Seventh Ave. 













Pest House. 

City of Columbus. 

Smallpox. 

1894 

No. 

Yes. 

25 

l 

1 


1 

l 


Dodge: 













U. S. Army Post Hospital .. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1902 

G) 

Yes. 

96 

l 

1 


2 

6 2 


Fort Oglethorpe. 












Fort McPherson: 













U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1889 

G) 

Yes. 

50 

l 

1 


1 

81 


Fort Scriven: 












U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

G) 

G) 

Yes. 

33 

2 

2 


4 

64 


Griffin: 











Griffin Hospital. 

(i). 

(i). 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

Merriweather and College Sts. 



Macon: 













Macon Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious 

1895 

Yes. 

Yes. 

65 

15 

3 

12 

21 


21 

820 Pine St. 













Pine dale: 













Pine Mountain Tuberculosis Sana- 

Private corporation. 

Tubercular. 

1909 

No. 

No. 

30 

7 

1 

6 

3 


3 

torium. 













Savannah: 













Charity Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1893 

Yes. 

Yes. 

26 

43 

7 

36 

11 


11 

Thirty-sixth and Florence Sts. 













Georgia Infirmary. 

Private corporation. 

General..'T.. 

1832 

Yes. 

( 2 ) 

50 

15 

12 

3 

10 


10 

Thirty-fifth and Lincoln Sts. 












St. Joseph’s Hospital. 

Sisters of Mercy. 

General. 

1875 

Yes. 

No. 

100 

21 

1 

20 

14 


14 

Taylor and Habersham Sts. 













Savannah Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1807 

Yes. 

No. 


11 

1 

10 

17 


17 

116 Huntington St., east. 













Smallpox Hospital. 

City of Savannah. 

Smallpox. 

(') 

No. 

Yes. 

40 

1 


1 

2 

1 

1 

Telfair Hospital for Women. 

Private organization. 

General. 

1887 

Yes. 

No. 

42 

8 

i 

7 

14 


14 

17 Park Ave., east. 













U. S. Marine Hospital .. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1906 

No. 

Yes. 

40 

2 

2 


2 

2 


York and Drayton Sts. 













Thomasville: 













City Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1904 

No. 

Yes. 

20 

12 


12 

3 


3 

Waycross: 












Atlantic Coast Line Hospital 3 .... 

Relief Department Atlantic 

General. 

1898 

No. 

Yes. 

G) 

3 

3 


11 


11 

Coast L'ine R. R. Co. 











King’s Daughters’ Hospital. 

King’s Daughters. 

(i). 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

Ashley and Hamilton Aves. 



IDAHO. 













Boise: 













St. Alphonsus’ Hospital... 

Sisters of the Holy Cross.... 

General, except contagious.. 

1895 

Yes. 

Yes. 

97 

12 


12 

19 

1 

18 

Fffth and State'Sts. 











St. Luke’s Hospital. 

Private corporation (Epis- 

General. 

1902 

Yes. 

Yes. 

65 

25 


25 

16 


16 

106 East Bannock St. 

copal). * ' 












U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1863 

G) 

No. 

16 

2 

2 


1 

8 7 


Boise Barracks. 












Lewiston: 













St. Joseph’s Hospital. 

Sisters of St. Joseph. 

General. 

1901 

No. 

Yes. 

50 

4 

4 


7 

1 

6 

415 Sixth St. 













Pocatello: 













Japanese General Hospital. 

Association of Japanese rail- 

General. 

1896 

No. 

No. 

40 

4 

2 

2 

1 

1 


132 North Grant Ave. 

road employees. 












Wallace: 













Providence Hospital. 

Sisters of Charity of Provi- 

General. 

1891 

No. 

Yes. 

80 

3 


3 

3 

1 

2 


dence. 













■ Not reported. 3 Opened June 2,1910; statistics for seven months. 

2 Colored only. 1 Includes report of dispensary. 



















































































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


271 


SANITARIUMS: 1910—Continued. 


PATIENTS TREATED 

during YEAR. 

PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE 

OF YEAR. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Adults 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

0) 

0 

0) 

0) 

(•) 

0 

0 

0 

254 

246 

8 

13 

13 


13 


226 

126 

100 

11 

6 

5 

11 


285 

175 

110 

11 

7 

4 

11 


38 

38 


6 

6 


6 


88 

0 

0) 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0) 

3,673 

2,001 

1,672 

103 

50 

53 

90 

13 

896 

410 

486 

42 

20 

22 

42 


897 

389 

508 

39 

17 

22 

36 

3 

880 

4o0 

430 

35 

19 

16 

27 

8 

1,074 

534 

540 

46 

21 

25 

44 

2 

729 

312 

417 

59 

30 

29 

42 

17 

0) 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0) 

35 

10 

25 

8 

5 

3 

8 


107 

( l ) 

0 

9 

0 

C 1 ) 

0 

0 

126 

56 

70 






451 

451 


2 

2 


2 


718 

718 







555 

555 


10 

10 


10 


0) 

( i ) 

0 

0 

0 

0) 

( i ) 

0 

1,350 

505 

845 

48 

22 

26 

45 

3 

70 

41 

29 

13 

8 

5 

13 


615 

312 

303 

14 

3 

11 

11 

3 

707 

464 

243 

34 

0 

0 

0 

0) 

791 

484 

307 

39 

22 

17 

26 

13 

1,316 

0 

0) 

34 

( i ) 

0) 

0 

0 

28 

20 

8 

5 

5.. 


5 


597 1 


597 

30 


30 

22 

8 

7 345 

345 


25 

25 


25 


129 

65 

64 

7 

4 

3 

7 


7 773 

773 


0 

0) 

0 

0 

0) 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0) 

0) 

0 

808 

369 

439 

60 

32 

28 

57 

3 

802 

386 

416 

23 

9 

14 

21 

2 

162 

162 







313 

129 

184 

24 

11 

13 

21 

3 

131 

131 


6 

6 


6 


429 

347 

82 

40 

32 

8 

40 




6 Instruction for Hospital C 

orps. 




6 Enlisted men, Hospital Corps. 



RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 


Total. 


0) 

0) 

$2,080 
12,484 
0) 

0 ) 

4 76,698 

P) 

31,304 

33,572 

29,498 

9,376 

0 ) 

P> 

4,656 

1,732 

P) 

C 1 ) 

0) 

P) 

35,000 

10,894 

3,663 

11,016 

0 ) 

25,330 

4,000 

15,695 

16,215 

3,600 

0 ) 

C 1 ) 


12,780 

0) 

P) 

11,549 

3,709 

19,082 


Derived from— 


Appro¬ 

pria¬ 

tions. 


0 ) 


$5,000 

0 ) 

0) 

76,698 


15,000 

7,000 

P) 


4,656 

1,392 

C 1 ) 

0) 

C 1 ) 

0) 

11,000 


900 
8,000 
P) 

5,000 

4,000 


16,215 

960 


P) 


180 


0) 

0) 


Dona¬ 

tions. 


0) 

P) 


$1,911 

3,265 


44 


P) 


C 1 ) 

1,000 


62 

243 


400 


C 1 ) 

P) 


600 


P) 


2,676 

3,709 

126 


Care of 
patients. 


P) 

$910 

2,0S0 

7,484 

P) 

757 


P) 

29,177 

27,140 

14,498 

2,265 

P) 

P) 


240 

P). 

0) 

P) 

P) 

23,000 

9,894 

2,431 

1,658 

P) 

17,183 


5,708 


2,040 


0) 

12,000 

25,970 

C 1 ) 

7,945 


18,756 


Other 

sources. 


P) 

P) 


$216 

3,167 


67 


P) 

P) 


100 


P) 


1,000 

270 

1,115 

0) 
3,147 


9,987 


200 


C 1 ) 


P) 


928 


200 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 

• 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

13 

$15,557 

$15,557 


$80,000 

$80,000 


14 

2,000 

2,000 


5,000 

5,000 


15 

8,569 

7,591 

$978 

103,100 

103,100 


16 

0 

4,073 

0 

0 

0 


17 

4,175 

4,175 


0 

0 

0 

1 

4 79,610 

76,698 

2,912 

4 125,722 

125,722 


2 

(i) 

(i) 


(i) 

(i) 


3 

34,104 

34,104 


125,000 

125,000 


4 

33,244 

33,244 


90,000 

90,000 


5 

31,195 

29,195 

2,000 

30,000 

0 

0 

6 

9,592 

9,592 


17,000 

17,000 


7 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

8 

0 

0 

0 

8,000 

8,000 


9 

4,656 

4,656 


10,000 

10,000 


10 

1,732 

1,732 


2,500 

'2,500 


11 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 


12 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 


13 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 


14 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

15 

36,700 

35,000 

1,700 

50,000 

50,000 


16 

9,299 

5,547 

3,752 

6,000 

6,000 


17 

3,673 

3,357 

316 

6,000 

6,000 


18 

10,004 

10,004 


70,000 

50,000 

$20,000 

19 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

20 

25,141 


0 

0 

0 

0 

21 

1,700 

1,700 


10,000 

10,000 


22 

15,677 

15,677 


0 

0 

250,000 

23 

16,215 

0 

0 

0 

0 


24 

3,580 

3,580 


16,000 

13,000 

3,000 

25 

31,457 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

26 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

27 

12,700 

11,800 

900 

0 

0 


1 

35,995 

25,995 

10,000 

135,000 

100,000 

35,000 

2 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 


3 

7,779 

7,404 

375 

43,870 

43,870 


4 

3,943 

3,943 


1,000 

1,000 


5 

17,991 

16,544 

1,447 

68,713 

68,713 


6 


7 Exclusive of out-patients. 

8 Employees: includes statistics of Atlantic Coast Line Hospital, Rocky Mount, N. C. 
















































































































































































272 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 


Table IV.— HOSPITALS AND 


a 


c 

c 

o 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 


7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 

21 

22 

23 

24 

25 

26 

27 

28 

29 

30 

31 

32 

33 

34 


35 

36 

37 

38 


NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of cases treated. 

Year founded. 

Training school for 

nurses. 

Colored patients re¬ 

ceived. 

Number of beds. 

MEDICAL STAFF 
AT CLOSE OF 
YEAR. 

NURSES AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 

*3 

o 

H 

-t-j 

© 

’3 

© 

£ 

bi 

.9 

•pH 

V} 

> 

*3 

4-> 

O 

H 

•2 

© 

*3 

a 

© 

ILLINOIS. 













Alton: 













St. Joseph’s Hospital. 

Sisters of Charity...*.. 

General. 

186.5 

Yes. 

Yes. 

75 

12 


12 

14 


14 

Central Ave.* 













Aurora: 













Aurora Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1886 

Yes. 

Yes. 

25 

(‘) 

23 

(») 

10 


10 

368 South Lincoln Ave. 












St. Charles Hospital... 

Franciscan Sisters of the 

General. 

1900 

No. 

Yes. 

60 

45 


45 

27 


27 

67 North Fourth St. 

Sacred Heart. 












Aviston: 













Sacred Heart Hospital. 

Sisters, Poor Handmaids of 

General. 

1881 

No. 

Yes. 

27 

C 1 ) 

2 

( l ) 

5 


5 


Jesus Christ. 











Belleville: 













St. Elizabeth’s Hospital .. 

Hospital Sisters of St. Fran- 

General, except contagious.. 

1875 

No. 

Yes. 

75 

(') 


0) 

19 

(. 

19 

328 West Second St. 

cis. 










St. Vincent’s Hospital and Old 

Sisters, Poor Handmaids of 

General, except contagious.. 

1901 

No. 

Yes. 

200 

22 


22 

16 


16 

Folks Home. 

Jesus Christ. 












Race and Second Sts. 













Belvidere: 













St. Joseph’s Hospital. 

Sisters of St. Joseph. 

General. 

1900 

No. 

Yes. 

50 

16 

6 

10 

5 


5 

Julien St. 













Bloomington: 













Brokaw Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious 

1902 

Yes. 

Yes. 

60 

12 

0) 

0) 

20 


20 



and incurable. 









St. Joseph’s Hospital. 

Hospital Sisters of St. Fran- 

General. 

1878 

No. 

Yes. 

125 

31 

1 

30 

25 

i 

24 

Jackson St. and Morris Ave. 

cis. 












Blue Island: 













St. Francis’ Hospital. 

Sisters of St. Mary._ 

General, except contagious.. 

1904 

No. 

No. 

28 

16 


16 

11 


11 

356 Gregory St. 













Breese: 













St. Joseph’s Hospital. 

Sisters, Poor Handmaids of 

General. 

1898 

No. 

Yes. 

30, 

( l ) 

C 1 ) 

0) 

4 


4 


Jesus Christ. 








Cairo: 













St. Mary’s Infirmary. 

Sisters of the Holy Cross. 

General, except contagious.. 

1864 

Yes. 

Yes. 

75 

(>) 

0) 

(0 

14 

2 

12 

2025 Walnut St.' 









U. S. Marine Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1883 

No. 

Yes. 

40 

2 

2 


2 

2 


Eleventhand Cedar Sts. 













Carlinville: 













Home Hospital 4 . 

Private individual. 

Chronic. 

1878 

No. 

No. 

10 

( l ) 

0) 

0) 

(‘) 

0) 

0) 

247 North Broad. 








Champaign: 













Julia F. Burnham Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except tubercular 

1893 

Yes. 

Yes. 

44 

31 

11 

20 

14 


14 

48 Springfield Ave.* 


and smallpox. 











Chicago: 













Abraham Lincoln Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1907 

Yes. 

Yes. 

35 

9 

1 

8 

6 


6 

2943 Calumet Ave.* 













Alexian Brothers’ Hospital 5 . 

Order of St. Alexius. 

General. 

1866 

Yes. 

Yes. 

280 

34 

10 

24 

97 

97 


1200 Belden Ave. 













Augustana Hospital. 

Lutheran Augustana Synod. 

General. 

1884 

Yes. 

No. 

220 

21 

15 

6 

84 


84 

2043 Cleveland Ave. 












BeulahHome and Maternity Hos- 

Private corporation. 

Obstetrical. 

1896 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

6 

2 

4 

5 


5 

pital. 













2142 North Clark St. 












Bohemian Lying-in Hospital. 

Illinois College for Mid wives. 

Obstetrical.. 

1909 

Yes. 

Yes. 

10 

1 

1 


5 


5 

3639 Twenty-second *St. 












Chicago Baptist Hospital 6 . 

Baptist churches of Chicago. 

General, except contagious .. 

1892 










Chicago E*ye, Ear* Nose and 

Chicago Eye, Ear, Nose and 

Eye, ear, nose, and throat... 

1897 

Yes. 

Yes. 

38 

. 

32 

16 

16 

9 

2 

7 

Throat Hospital. 

Throat College. 












235 West Washington St. 













Chicago Homeopathic Hospital.... 

Hering Medical College. 

General, except contagious.. 

1886 

Yes. 

Yes. 

40 

31 

3 

28 

8 


8 

711 South Wood St. 












Chicago Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1892 

No. 

No. 

43 

18 

3 

15 

15 

5 

10 

8ll East*Forty-ninth St. 













Chicago Lying-in Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

Maternity. 

1895 

Yes. 

Yes. 

15 

12 

6 

6 

9 


9 

515 Ashland Boulevard. 













Chicago Policlinic and Hospital... 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1885 

Yes. 

Yes. 

48 

41 

41 


0) 

0) 

(>) 

219 West Chicago Ave.* 










Chicago Union Hospital. 

Belden Avenue Baptist 

General, except contagious.. 

1901 

Yes. 

Yes. 

51 

12 

2 

10 

27 


27 

830 Wellington St. 

Church. 











Children’s Memorial Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1884 

Yes. 

Yes. 

110 

24 

3 

21 

40 


40 

706 Fullerton Ave. 












City Smallpox Hospital. 

City of Chicago. 

Smallpox. 

1896 

No. 

Yes. 

125 

1 


1 

4 


4 

Thirty-fourth St. and Lawn- 

• 












dale Ave. 













Columbus Hospital. 

Missionarv Sisters of the 

General. 

1903 

Yes. 

0) 

150 

22 

4 

18 

52 

2 

50 

2540 Lake View Ave. 

Sacred Heart. 











Cook County Hospital. 

Cook County. 

General. 

1866 

No. 

Yes. 

1,350' 

130 

60 

70 

272 

30 

242 

Harrison and Uonore Sts. 












Englewood Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious 

1893 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

29 

4 

25 

35 


35 

"6001 Green St. 


and nervous*. 










Evangelical Deaconess Home and 

Deaconess Society of the 

General. 

1904 

Yes. 

No. 

40 

15 

15 


25 


25 

Hospital. 

Evangelical Association. 











408 Wisconsin St. 













Frances E. Willard National 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1884 

Yes. 

Yes. 

80 

25 


20 

35 


35 

Temperance Hospital. 











710 South Lincoln St. 













Frances Juvenile Home. 

Private corporation. 

Gonorrheal, vibro-vaginitis, 

1909 

No. 

Yes. 

15 

9 


9 

2 


2 

3929 Indiana Ave. 


and congenital syphilis. 











Garfield Park Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1894 

Yes. 

No. 

50 

(!) 


0) 

27 

2 

25 

3813 Washington Boulevard. 










German American Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1S96 

Yes. 

Yes. 

60 

18 

1 

17 

22 


22 

731 Diversey Parkway. 












German Hospital of Chicago. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious, 

1883 

Yes. 

No. 

74 

30 

5 

25 

28 


28 

2211 Hamilton Court. ~ 


incurable, and insane. 










1 Not reported. 2 Includes report of dispensary. 


2 Exclusive of out-patients. 


* Women and children. 


























































































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


273 


SANITARIUMS: 1910—Continued. 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Tocal. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

$10,359 

$9,159 

$1,200 

$24,000 

$24,000 


1 

10,443 

10,443 


44,500 

30,000 

$14,500 

2 

26,350 

20,941 

5,409 

100,000 

100,000 


3 

1,192 

1,192 





4 

(*) 

(») 

0) 

0 ) 

0 ) 

(*) 

5 

(i) 

0) 

0) 




6 

17,000 

2,000 

15,000 

60,000 

60,000 


7 

21,416 

(») 

0) 

< i ) 

o) 

p> 

8 

2 10,753 

7,683 

3,070 

*100,000 

100,000 


9 

12,823 

12,823 


25,000 

25,000 


10 

3,730 

1,602 

2,128 

25,000 

25,000 


11 

(») 

0) 

( i ) 

( i ) 

( i ) 


12 

13,135 

C 1 ) 

0) 

(»> 

0) 


13 

o) 

0) 


(») 

(») 


14 




16,360 

15,966 

394 

72,700 

40,000 

32,700 

15 

5,629 

5,629 


3,000 

3,000 


16 

2 105,860 

81,120 

24,740 

*350,000 

350,000 


17 

114,799 

92,318 

22,481 

275,000 

,275,000 


18 

20,081 

9,081 

11,000 

41,000 

40,000 

1,000 

19 

1,500 

1,000 

500 

20,-000 

20,000 


20 







21 

39,616 

26,052 

13,564 

200,000 

200,000 


22 

7 26,560 

26,560 


7 30,000 

30,000 


23 

48,000 

48,000 


135,000 

135,000 


24 

10,697 

10,297 

400 

99,000 

75,000 

24,000 

25 

37,705 

37,705 


65,283 

65,283 


26 

28,337 

28,337 


( i > 

90,000 

(>) 

27 

2 49,630 

47,707 

1,923 

*292,200 

220,000 

72,200 

28 

6,000 

6,000 


66,932 

66,932 


29 

45,133 

41,973 

3,160 

200,000 

200,000 


30 

583,038 

583,038 


0) 

( l ) 


31 

51,879 

51,879 


99,684 

99,684 


32 

29,289 

28,837 

452 

50,000 

50,000 


33 

47,709 

(•) 

(*) 

150,000 

150,000 


34 

2,154 

2,154 


8 500 

8 500 


35 

0) 

40,968 

(*) 

60,000 

60,000 


36 

21,600 

21,000 

600 

15,000 

15,000 


37 

55,791 

55,791 


111,113 

111,113 


38 







PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING YEAR. 

PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 


Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Adulta 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

Total. 

405 

259 

146 

22 

11 

11 

20 

2 

$10,641 

455 

158 

297 

15 

4 

11 

15 


12,207 

1,169 

684 

485 

28 

13 

15 

28 


26,448 

80 

35 

45 

34 

10 

24 

32 

2 

1,192 

661 

296 

365 

59 

(*> 

(•) 

( i ) 

0) 

(>) 

351 

168 

183 

77 

30 

47 

68 

9 

(■) 

276 

198 

78 

0) 

o 


0) 

(>) 

6,285 

376 

170 

206 

42 

20 

22 


42 

21,680 

1,072 

460 

612 

88 

30 

58 

73 

15 

* 11,352 

393 

215 

178 

20 

12 

8 

13 

7 

12,915 

62 

33 

29 

13 

(■) 

0) 

7 

6 

1,983 

560 

(») 

.(>) 

30 

( i ) 

0) 

0) 

(*) 

o) 

*203 

203 


8 

8 


8 


13,135 

( l ) 

0) 

0) 

5 


5 

5 


0) 

842 

578 

264 

15 

8 

7 

15 


15,758 

174 

86 

88 

3 

1 

2 

3 


4,509 

3,199 

3,199 


215 

215 


208 

7 

* 105,630 

2,768 

1,195 

1,573 

174 

71 

103 

161 

13 

116,377 

205 


205 

45 


45 

45 


20,499 

30 


30 

6 

1 

5 

4 

2 

20 

3 1,014 

(>) 

(») 

21 

0) 

(*) 

0) 

0) 

40,332 

396 

119 

277 

12 

4 

8 

8 

4 

7 26,560 

800 

300 

500 

25 

17 

8 

25 


48,000 

202 


202 

12 


12 

12 


* 19,709 

( i ) 

0) 

0) 

26 

13 

13 

26 


46,868 

985 

328 

657 

45 

14 

31 

42 

3 

35,648 

1,094 

470 

624 

95 

55 

40 


95 

*91,924 

31 

22 

9 

6 

6 


6 


6,920 

1,677 

749 

928 

72 

34 

38 

67 

5 

45,133 

1,710 

1,179 

531 

(>) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

583,038 

2,159 

760 

1,399 

55 

( i ) 

(>) 

( i ) 

( i ) 

187,762 

726 

206 

520 

22 

3 

19 

20 

2 

33,175 

1,621 

669 

952 

57 

24 

33 

57 


47,709 

22 

5 

17 

12 

0) 

0) 


12 

1,901 

782 

<») 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

27 

(*) 

650 

300 

350 

36 

11 

25 

30 

6 

21,600 

1,033 

407 

626 

41 

17 

24 

37 

4 

54,211 


6 Males. 


6 

Not open during 1910. 


RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 


Derived from— 


Appro¬ 

pria¬ 

tions. 


SI,757 

1,335 

1,486 

192 

0 ) 


13,135 


Dona¬ 

tions. 


$710 

2,230 

3,658 


0) 


3,000 3,285 


8 

302 

1,771 

334 

0) 


1,050 


12,460 

1,695 

18,038 


Care of 
patients. 


$7,631 

7,442 

21,304 

1,000 

0) 


18,815 

11,050 

9,864 

1,460 

0) 


0) 

11,197 

4,509 

70,325 

110,522 

1,087 

20 

'*23,309 


Other 

sources. 


0) 

0) 


2,857 


1,280 


0 ) 


3,511 


17,023 


1,000 

2 7,733 


3,000 

6,820 


6,058 

44,040 


3,691 


25,560 

48,000 

8,076 

46,868 

28,936 

1,961 

100 

40,432 


23,900 


654 

42,923 


1,010 


583,038 


6,877 

4,022 

5,569 

1,401 


10,309 


56,054 

25,654 

41,023 

500 

44,422 

21,600 

43,046 


124,831 

3,499 

1,117 


0 ) 


856 


7 Includes report of Hering Medical College Dispensary. 


Equipment. 


44153°—14- 


-18 





































































































































































































274 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table IV.— HOSPITALS AND 







*4 

•S 

I 

© 


MEDICAL STAFF 

NURSES AT CLOSE 









AT CLOSE 

OF 

OF YEAR. 

© 






GO 

■+■* 


\ EAR. 





a 

a 

NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised orconducted by— 

Class of cases treated. 

T3 

© 

o . 

Xi on 
o © 

E» GO 

a 

g © 

© 







'O 

-4-> 

3 

§ 

1-4 




§ 

u 

c3 

© 

tc 

3 

| 

M 

H 

© 

© 

© 

© 

o 

© 

s 

3 

z 

”3 

4-i 

o 

H 

© 

2 

*«s 

© 

tJD 

.3 

V. 

d 

-4^> 

o 

e 

© 

'd 

s 

13 

a 

© 

Ph 


ILLIN OIS—Continued. 














Chicago—C ontinued. 







(>) 


p) 

26 


25 

39 

Grace Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1905 

Yes. 

Yes. 

45 

19 

1 

308 South Sangamon St. 




51 


45 

42 


42 

40 

Hahnemann Hospital of the City 
of Chicago. 

Private corporation .... 

General.... 

1855 

Yes. 

Yes. 

112 

6 











2814 Groveland Ave. 







P) 


0) 

P) 

P) 

P) 

41 

Henrotin Memorial Hospital. 

Chicago Policlinic Hospital.. 

General, except contagious, 
incurable, and insane. 

1907 

Yes. 

No. 

75 

41 

927 La Salle Ave. 



16 

16 

42 

Home for Destitute Crippled 
Children. 


Crippled children under 12.. 

1893 

No. 

Yes. 

100 

32 

15 

17 







1653 Park Ave. 










25 


25 

43 

Hospital of St. Anthony de Padua. 
West Nineteenth St. and Mar- 

Franciscan Sisters of the 

General. 

1898 

Yes. 

No. 

137 

24 

4 

20 


Sacred Heart. 









shall Boulevard. 










2 7 



44 

Illinois Charitable Eye and Ear 
Infirmary. 

State of Illinois 

Eye, ear, nose, and throat... 

1858 

No. 

Yes. 

216 

2 50 

5 

45 


7 









904 West Adams St. 










15 


15 

45 

Jefferson Park Policlinic and 
Hospital. 


General, except contagious.. 

1902 

Yes. 

Yes. 

40 

63 

3 

60 









1402 West Monroe St. 










26 


26 

46 

Mary Thompson Hospital <. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1865 

Yes. 

Yes. 

SO 

24 

4 

20 


Adams and Paulina Sts. 






120 


120 

47 

Mercy Hospital. 

Sisters of Mercy. 

General, except contagious.. 

1850 

Yes. 

Yes. 

500 

32 

7 

25 


2537 Prairie Ave. 


53 


35 

100 


100 

48 

Michael Reese Hospital.. 

Associated Jewish Charities.. 

General, except contagious.. 

1861 

Yes. 

No. 

400 

18 


Twenty-ninth St. and Grove- 







land Ave. 










11 


11 

49 

Monroe Street Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious 
and insane. 

1889 

Yes. 

Yes. 

35 

13 

3 

10 


2501 West Monroe St. 





34 


34 

50 

Norwegian Lutheran Deaconess 

United Norwegian Lutheran 

General, except contagious.. 

1896 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

26 

10 

16 



Home and Hospital. 

Church. 












1138 North Leavitt St. 










*20 


20 

51 

Norwegian Tabitha Hospital 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1894 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

14! 

2 

12 


Francisco Ave., Thomas and 










Cortez Sts. 










14 


14 

52 

Park Avenue Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1901 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

26 ! 

2 

24 


1940 Park Ave*. 








29 

53 

Passavant Memorial Hospital. 

Institution of Protestant 

General, except tubercular 

1865 

Yes. 

Yes. 

70 

24 

3 

21 

29 



149 West Superior St. 

Deaconesses (Lutheran). 

and venereal. 





17 





6 

54 

People’s Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1897 

Yes. 

Yes. 

40 

5 

12 

6 


"’Twenty-second St. and Ar¬ 
cher Ave. 














55 

Post-Graduate Hospital... 

Post - Graduate Medical 

General. 

1889 

Yes. 

Yes. 

60 

44 

4 

40 

2 30 


30 

2400 Dearborn §t. 

School. 







56 

57 

Presbyterian Hospital. 

Presbyterian Church. 

General, except contagious.. 
General. 

1883 

Yes. 

Yes. 

300 

46 

14 

32 

133 

8 

125 

Prospect Hospital.. 

Private corporation. 

1909 

Yes. 

No. 

15 

18 

2 

16 

4 


4 

1610 N orth Irving Ave. 







58 

Provident Hospital and Training 
School. 

Private corporation. 

General, except chronic and 
contagious. 

1891 

Yes. 

Yes. 

65 

29 

3 

26 

21 


21 







16 West Thirty-sixth St. 













59 

Pullman Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General.j_ 

0) 

Yes. 

No. 

23 

18 


18 

7 


7 

11217 Watt Ave. 







60 

Ravenswood Hospital. 

Private association. 

General, except contagious, 
insane, and narcotic. 

1905 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

12 

1 

11 

25 


25 

1917 Wilson Ave. 




61 

Rhodes Avenue Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1908 

Yes. 

No. 

65 

29 

3 

26 

23 


23 

460 East Thirty-second St. 





62 

Robert Burns Hospital . 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1907 

Yes. 

No. 

30 

20 


20 

15 


15 

3807 Washington Boulevard. 

St. Anne’s Hospital. 

Sisters, Poor Handmaids of 
Jesus Christ. 

General. 

4 

P) 

P) 

63 

1903 

P> 

(>) 

P) 

54 

50 

P) 

Forty-ninth Ave. and Thomas 
St. 

St. Bernard’s Hospital. 



64 

Hospital Sisters of St. Joseph. 

General. 

1905 

Yes. 

Yes. 

200 

36 

6 

30 

51 


51 

6337 Harvard Ave. 





65 

St. Elizabeth’s Hospital . 

Sisters, Poor Handmaids of 
Jesus Christ. 

General, except contagious.. 

18S8 

Yes. 

Yes. 

212 

25 

6 

19 

26 

3 

23 

Claremont Ave.*and Le Movne 
St. 

St. Joseph’s Hospital . 




66 

Sisters of Charity of St. Vin¬ 
cent de Paul. 

General, except contagious.. 

1865 

Yes. 

Yes. 

125 

40 

4 

36 

2 48 


48 

740 (Jarfleld Ave. 



67 

St. Luke’s Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious, 
incurable, and insane. 

1863 

Yes. 

Yes. 

320 

63 

15 

48 

124 


124 

1416 Indiana Ave. 



68 

St. Mary of Nazareth Hospital_ 

Sisters of the Holy Family 

General, except contagious 

1894 

Yes. 

Yes. 

160 

36 

4 

32 

45 

1 

44 


1120 North Leavitt St. 

of Nazareth. 

and tubercular. 











69 

St. Vincent’s Maternity Hospital. 
721 La Salle Ave. 

Sisters of Charity. 

Obstetrical. 

1872 

Yes. 

No. 

50 

13 

1 

12 

6 


6 




70 

South Chicago Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1895 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

18 

2 

16 

12 


12 

2323 East Ninety-second Place. 




71 

Swedish Covenant Hospital. 

Swedish Evangelical Mis¬ 
sion Covenant. 

General, except contagious.. 

1903 

Yes. 

Yes. 

40 


1 

6 

16 


16 

2739 Foster Ave. 



72 

U. S. Marine Hospital . 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1852 

No. 

Yes. 

30 

3 

3 


6 

6 


4141 Clarendon Ave. 







73 

Washington Park Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1904 

Yes. 

No. 

75 

12 

4 

8 

36 


36 

447 East Sixtieth St. 





74 

Wesley Hospital. 

Methodist Episcopal Church. 

General, except contagious.. 

1888 

Yes. 

Yes. 

265 

77 

9 

68 

104 

4 

100 


2449 Dearborn St. 



Danville: 













75 

Lake View Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1892 

Yes. 

Yes. 

35 

14 

14 


12 


12 

812 Logan Ave. 





76 

St. Elizabeth’s Hospital. 

Franciscan Sisters of the 

General. 

1882 

No. 

Yes. 

125 

30 

14 

16 

23 

i 

22 

Green St. 

Sacred Heart. 



Decatur: 













77 

St. Mary’s Hospital. 

Hospital Sisters of St. Fran¬ 
cis. 

General, except contagious 
and matermtv. 

1878 

No. 

P) 

76 

0) 

0) 

P) 

17 


17 



78 

Wabash Employees’ Hospital. 

Wabash Employees’ Hos¬ 
pital Association. 

General. 

18S4 

No. 

Yes. 

60 

3 

1 

2 


2 

5 

Waggoner and Herkimer Sts. 








1 Not reported. 2 Exclusive of out-patients. 

2 Includes report of dispensary. « Women and children; statistics for eight months, covering present management. 



























































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


275 


SANITARIUMS: 1910—Continued. 


PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING YEAR. 

PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE 

OF YEAR. 


RECEIPTS DURING 

1 

YEAR. 


Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Adults 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

Total. 1 

- 

Appro¬ 

pria¬ 

tions. 

Derived 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

from— 

Care of 
patients. 

Other 

sources. 

747 

512 

235 

0) 

0) 

0) 

(!) 

0) 

$17,447 



$17,447 


1,396 

465 

931 

54 

19 

35 

45 

9 

70,747; 


$5,500 

45,465 

$19,782 

849 

384 

465 

21 

8 

13 

19 

2 

63,581! 



63,581 


3 122 

61 

01 

68 

0) 

o 


68 

21,158 

(9 

(9 

(9 

(9 

1,609 

829 

780 

73 

23 

50 

64 

9 

52,391 



50,391 

2,000 

1,913 

1,247 

666 

122 

65 

57 

87 

35 

2 59,000 

$59,000 


769 

467 

302 

30 

18 

12 

27 

3 

16,815 


16,815 


643 

65 

578 

40 

6 

34 

28 

12 

20,617 


1,334 

18,283 

1,000 

3,355 

1,744 

1,611 

187 

108 

79 

177 

10 

193,748 


2,549 

183,058 

8,141 

6,412 

2,564 

3,848 

282 

118 

164 

226 

56 

235,958 


86,771 

128,820 

20,367 

520 

408 

112 

27 

24 

3 

27 


16,416 

\ 


16,416 


• 1,208 

548 

660 

64 

34 

30 

57 

7 

54,697 


7,778 

33,413 

13,506 

666 

253 

413 

22 

8 

14 

19 

3 

18,927 


1,059 

17,868 


394 

200 

194 

20 

6 

14 

20 


11,800 


11,S00 


1,902 

1,096 

806 

57 

30 

27 

48 

9 

45,558 


6,070 

27,387 

12,101 

632 

526 

106 

20 

13 

7 

17 

3 

9,900 


300 

9,600 


1,552 

0) 

(9 

45 

o) 

(9 

(9 

(9 

2 47,699 


500 

26,929 

20,270 

4,227 

2,178 

2,049 

184 

103 

81 

162 

22 

214,079 


29,699 

164,604 

19,776 

121 

43 

78 

2 

1 

1 

2 


3,091 


11 

3,080 


848 

458 

390 

(9 

o) 

(9 

(9 

(9 

20,567 


1,690 

14,870 

4,007 

411 

213 

198 

19 


0) 

fn 

(1) 

14,218 



14,218 


770 

269 

501 

43 

V / 

18 

25 

\ / 

35 

8 

31,881 


327 

28,174 

3,380 

5^0 

220 

340 

34 

10 

24 

34 


20,434 



20,434 


776 

276 

500 

14 

3 

11 

14 


24,192 



24,192 


3 930 

370 

560 

54 

0) 

(9 

(9 

(9 

(9 

(9 

(9 

(9 

(9 

3,282 

1,729 

1,553 

111 

50 

61 

104 

7 

82,151 


10,837 

68,567 

2,747 

*3 QAS 

1 

9 ms 

126 

48 

78 

119 

7 

80,907 


2,400 

78,507 


1,643 

638 

1,005 

84 

38 

46 

74 

10 

2 79,199 


4,859 

46,251 

28,089 

5 646 

1 2 980 

o 556 

254 

146 

108 

254 


228.24G 


7,836 

198,923 

21,487 


964 

1 491 

111 

45 

66 

106 

5 

74,882 


7,404 

67.478 


—, oOO 

164 

164 

27 

27 

27 


( 5 ) 

( 5 ) 

( 5 ) 

( 5 ) 

( 5 ) 


OQA 

9^1 

18 

19 

6 

18 


14,109 


437 

13,672 


Oo / 

471 

ZoO 

193 

LOI 

278 

15 

6 

9 

12 

3 

6 24,605 


10,221 

12,060 

2,324 

3 £10 

£19 


47 

47 


47 


40,043 

40,043 




1,299 

Hi- 

546 

753 

57 

29 

28 

50 

7 

44,638 


44,638 


4,553 

(■) 

(>) 

124 

59 

65 

106 

18 

141,220 


9,810 

122,092 

9,318 

385 

136 

249 

17 

5 

12 

15 

2 

12,414 

2,076 

3,127 

7,211 


1,200 

887 

313 

86 

(9 

(9 

(9 

(9 

21,852 

4,370 

2,087 

15,395 


901 

440 

461 

53 

(>) 

(9 

(9 

(9 

(9 

(9 

(9 

(9 

(9 

484 

484 


14 

14 


14 


(9 


(9 

(9 

(9 


PAYMENTS DURING 

YEAR. | 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

$18,315 

$18,315 


$3,000 

$3,000 


39 

2 67,147 

56,074 

$11,073 

320,280 

165,000 

$155,280 

40 

60,302 

60,302 


268,488 

268,488 


41 

20,418 

(9 

(9 

(9 

(9 

(9 

42 

42,360 

42,360 


(9 

(9 

(9 

43 

2 54,500 

50,000 

4,500 

2 273,646 

273,646 


44 

16,654 

16,654 


20,000 

20,000 


45 

21,334 

20,000 

1,334 

80,000 

60,000 

20,000 

46 

158,036 

157,106 

930 

702,227 

702,227 


47 

240,259 

240,259 


1,143,489 

774,689 

368,800 

48 

16,241 

16,241 


2,500 

2,500 


49 

54,394 

45,603 

8,791 

174,372 

173,047 

1,325 

50 

19,066 

17,816 

1,250 

50,000 

50,000 


51 

14,700 

11,700 

3,000 

(9 

35,000 

(9 

52 

45,558 

44,276 

1,282 

(9 

125,000 

(9 

53 

10,000 

10,000 


25,000 

25,000 


54 

2 47,699 

47,091 

608 

2 82,438 

82,438 

• 

55 

208,064 

189,067 

18,997 

1,211,517 

721,134 

490,383 

56 

12,676 

10,676 

2,000 

3,288 

3,288 


57 

(9 

24,078 

(9 

150,000 

100,000 

50,000 

58 

11,848 

11,848 


13,217 

13,217 


59 

28,706 

27,954 

752 

79,659 

79,659 


60 

21,234 

14,534 

6,700 

7,600 

7,600 


61 

22,691 

21,000 

1,691 

6,500 

6,500 


62 

(9 

(9 

(9 

(9 

(9 

(9 

63 

77,153 

65,464 

11,689 

350,000 

350,000 


64 

78,754 

77,754 

1,000 

175,000 

175,000 


65 

2 77,654 

55,078 

22,576 

2 250,000 

250,000 


66 

213,348 

(9 

(9 

1,441,880 

1,276,671 

165,209 

67 

73,588 

72,588 

1,000 

230,000 

230,000 


68 

(9 

(9 

(9 

(9 

(9 


69 

14.836 

14,836 


30,000 

30,000 


70 

6 24,962 

23,582 

1,380 

6 51,300 

51,300 


71 

40,043 

(9 

(9 

500,000 

500,000 


72 

52,424 

48,601 

3,823 

60,000 

60,000 


73 

141,120 

141.120 

. 

704,778 

435,735 

269,043 

74 

12,661 

11.661 

1,000 

32,500 

30,000 

2.50C 

75 

26 698 

21,516 

5,182 

0) 

0) 


76 

(9 

(9 

(9 

(9 

(9 

(9 

77 

(9 

(9 

(9 

(9 

(9 

(9 

1 78 


5 Included in report of St. Vincent’s Infant Asylum. 7 Included in report of Wabash Employees’ Dispensary, Danville, Ill. 

e Includes report of Swedish Home of Mercy. 





























































































































































































276 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table IV.— HOSPITALS AND 


© 

a 

i 

a 

a 

o 


79 

80 
81 
82 

83 

84 

85 

86 

87 

88 

89 

90 

91 

92 

93 

94 

95 

96 

97 

98 

99 

100 

101 

102 

103 

104 

105 

106 

107 

108 

109 

110 

111 

112 

113 


NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised orconducted by— 

Class of cases treated. 

Year founded. 

Training school for 

nurses. 

Colored patients re¬ 

ceived. 

Number of beds. 

MEDICAL STAFF 
AT CLOSE OF 
YEAR. 

NURSES AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 

33 

O 

Eh 

P 

© 

*35 

© 

£ 

P 

*35 

> 

33 

o 

Eh 

© 

a 

© 

33 

a 

© 

ILLINOIS—Continued. 













Dixon: 













Dixon Public Hospital.... 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1896 

Yes. 

Yes. 

25 

33 

18 

15 

17 


17 

First and Ottawa Sts. 













East St. Louis: 













Contagion Hospital. 

City of East St. Louis. 

Smallpox. 

1903 

No. 

Yes. 

60 

5 

1 

4 

2 


2 

4300 Illinois Ave. 













Henrietta Hospital. 

Protestant Hospital Asso- 

General. 

1895 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

0 ) 

0 ) 

(>) 

10 


10 

Fifteenth St. and Illinois Ave. 

ciation. 









St. Mary’s Hospital. 

Sisters, Poor Handmaids of 

General. 

1889 

No. 

Yes. 

110 

4 


4 

26 

3 

23 

810 Missouri Ave. 

Jesus Christ. 












Effingham: 













St. Anthony’s Hospital . 

Hospital Sisters of St. Fran- 

Surgical. 

1875 

No. 

No. 

50 

10 


10 

15 


15 

Railroad Ave. * 

cis. 












Elgin: 













St. Joseph’s Hospital... 

Franciscan Sisters of the 

General. 

1904 

Yes. 

No. 

40 

1 


1 

12 

1 

11 

Prospect St. and Jefferson Ave. 

Sacred Heart. 












Sherman Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1888 

Yes. 

Yes. 

40 

0) 


0 ) 

21 


21 

934 North"Center St. 











Evanston: 













Evanston Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious 

1891 

Yes. 

Yes. 

90 

12 


12 

25 


25 

2650 Ridge" Ave. 


and insane." 











St. Francis’ Hospital. 

Poor Sisters of St. Francis... 

General. 

1901 

No. 

Yes. 

100 

18 

1 

17 

16 


16 

355 Ridge Ave. 













Fort Sheridan: 













U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1893 

( 2 ) 

Yes. 

100 

5 

5 


33 

333 


Freeport: 












Globe Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1902 

Yes. 

No. 

25 

(>) 

(») 

0 ) 

10 

2 

8 

461 Stephenson St. 










St. Francis’ Hospital. 

Franciscan Sisters of the 

Surgical. 

1890 

Yes. 

Yes. 

80 

15 


15 

28 


28 

149 South Walnut St. 

Sacred Heart. 











Galesburg: 













Galesburg Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1891 

Yes. 

Yes. 

85 

10 


10 

27 


27 

674 North Seminary St. 












St. Mary’s Hospital. 

Hospital Sisters of St. Fran- 

General. 

1909 


Yes. 

23 

10 


10 

9 

1 

8 

239 South Cherry St. 

cis. 











Geneseo: 













J. C. Hammond City Hospital. 

Private organization. 

General. 

1901 

No. 

No. 

12 

6 


6 

2 


2 

*536 College Ave." 













Geneva: 













Colonial Hospital«. 

Philanthropic Society. 

General. 

1911 










66 Third St. 













Highland: 













St. Joseph’s Hospital. 

Hospital Sisters of the Sacred 

General, except contagious.. 

1877 

No. 

No. 

84 

5 


5 

12 


12 


Heart. 










Jacksonville: 













Our Savior’s Hospital. 

Sisters of the Holy Cross.... 

General. 

1896 

Yes. 

Yes. 

30 

27 


27 

7 

1 

6 

446 East State St. 











Passavant Memorial Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1906 

Yes. 

Yes. 

40 

34 


34 

21 


21 

512 East State St. 












Joliet: 













St. Joseph’s Hospital. 

Franciscan Sisters of the 

General, except contagious 

1883 

Yes. 

Yes. 

160 

27 

2 

25 

25 


25 

426 North Broadway. 

Sacred Heart. 

and nervous*. 










Silver Cross Hospital. 

King’s Daughters. 

General, except contagious 

1892 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

26 

1 

25 

24 

12 

12 



and tubercular. 








Kankakee: 













Emergency Hospital. 

Sisters of the Sacred Heart 

General. 

1896 

No. 

Yes. 

40 

20 


20 

8 

1 

7 

Merchant St*, and Fifth Ave. 

of Mary. 










Kewanee: 

• 












St. Francis’ Hospital. 

Franciscan Sisters of the 

General. 

1902 

Yes. 

Yes. 

35 

16 


16 

14 


14 

Prospect and Elliott Sts. 

Immaculate Conception. 











Lake Forest: 













Alice Home Hospital. 

Lake Forest University. 

General. 

1899 

No. 

Yes. 

12 

1 


1 

2 


2 

College Campus. 













La Salle: 













St. Mary’s Hospital. 

Franciscan Sisters of the 

General, except contagious 

1.887 

No. 

No. 

75 

24 


24 

25 

2 

23 

O’Connor Ave. 

Sacred Heart. 

and maternity. 









Lincoln: 













St. Clara’s Hospital. 

IlospitalSistersof St. Francis 

General. 

1884 

No. 

0 ) 

82 

(») 

0 ) 

(') 

17 


17 

Sixth St. 





St. John’s Evangelical Deaconess 

St. John’s Evangelical Dea- 

General, except contagious.. 

1902 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

12 


12 

7 

1 

6 

Home and Hospital. 

coness Society. 












Walnut and Seventh Sts. 













Litchfield: 













St. Francis’ Hospital. 

Hospital Sisters of St. Francis 

General, except contagious.. 

1875 

No. 

Yes. 

60 

(>) 

0 ) 

(i) 

19 


19 

706 South State St. 













Macomb: 













St. Francis’ Hospital. 

Sisters of St. Francis. 

Surgical. 

1902 

No. 


35 

5 


5 

13 

1 

12 

Johnson St. * 









Moline: 













Moline Public Hospital. 

City of Moline. 

General. 

1892 

Yes. 

Yes. 

75 

32 

12 

20 

16 


16 

Morris: 






Morris Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1906 

Yes. 

No. 

25 

5 

5 


6 


6 

150 High St. 











Murphysboro: 













St. Andrew’s Hospital. 

Franciscan Sisters. 

General, except contagious.. 

1897 

Yes. 

Yes. 

30 

17 

13 

4 

10 



Sixth and Mulberry Sts. 







Naperville: 













Edward Sanatorium. 

Chicago Tuberculosis Insti- 

Tubercular. 

1907 

No. 

Yes. 

60 

5 

l 

4 





tute. 











Ottawa: 













Ottawa Tent Colony. 

Private corporation. 

Incipient pulmonary tuber- 

1904 

No. 

No. 

65 

2 

2 







cular. 










Rybum Hospital. 

City of Ottawa. 

General, except contagious.. 

1895 

Yes. 

Yes. 

25 

14 


14 

12 


12 

Clinton and Madison Sts. 















































































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


277 


SANITARIUMS: 1910—Continued. 


PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING YEAR. 

PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE 

OF YEAR. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Adults 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

3,128 

2,064 

1.064 

8 

4 

4 

4 

4 

60 

36 

24 

10 

5 

5 

8 

2 

684 

0) 

C 1 ) 

42 

(*) 

o 

o 

0) 

1,442 

1,068 

374 

0) 

(>) 

0) 

(>) 

0) 

405 

186 

219 

31 

16 

15 

31 


496 

263 

233 

25 

15 

10 

25 


527 

223 

304 

24 

8 

16 

19 

5 

1,051 

467 

584 

52 

16 

36 

36 

16 

587 

(>) 

(') 

54 

o) 

(*) 

i 1 ) 

(•) 

834 

834 


30 

30 


30 


328 

0) 

(*) 

(«) 

C 1 ) 

0) 

c) 

(0 

646 

277 

369 

42 

15 

27 

42 


813 

353 

460 

33 

15 

18 

30 

3 

324 

171 

153 

14 

6 

8 

13 

1 

47 

24 

23 

2 

2 


2 


180 

112 

68 

83 

46 

37 

82 

1 

469 

200 

269 

14 

4 

10 

13 

1 

516 

223 

293 

22 

7 

15 

20 

2 

1,550 

850 

700 

112 

68 

44 

105 

7 

672 

362 

310 

32 

12 

20 

29 

3 

400 

150 

250 

20 

(>) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

434 

136 

298 

37 

15 

22 

35 

2 

136 

67 

69 

2 

1 

1 

2 


711 

468 

243 

32 

19 

13 

28 

4 

484 

246 

238 

(>) 

o 

(■) 

(>) 

0) 

244 

105 

139 

21 

7 

14 

21 


580 

254 

326 

51 

0) 

c) 

0) 

o 

1,294 

606 

688 

29 

17 

12 

27 

2 

863 

585 

278 

44 

34 

10 

43 

1 

97 

45 

52 

12 

4 

8 

12 


365 

198 

167 

14 

(>) 

c) 

C 1 ) 

(■) 

146 

62 

84 

54 

20 

34 

52 

2 

130 

67 

63 

45 

21 

24 

45 


641 

426 

215 

20 

13 

7 

20 



Total. 


$11,230 

10,000 

C 1 ) 

28,407 

11,197 

14,067 

15,642 

560,583 

11,550 

0 ) 
7,977 
14,112 


4,046 


RECEIPTS DURING 

YEAR. 


PAYMENTS DURING 

YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

(2 

© 

rO 

a 











a 


Derived from— 




For 


Land, 


a 






For 

perma- 


build- 

In- 

a 

o 





Total. 

running 

nent 

Total. 

mgs, 

vested 

-t-* 

Appro- 

Dona- 

Care of 

Other 


ex- 

im- 


and 

funds. 


pria- 

tions. 

tions. 

patients. 

sources. 


penses. 

prove- 

ments. 


equip¬ 

ment. 


-t-> 

to 

C 











HH 

$500 

$730 

$10,000 


(*) 

$8,500 

0) 

0) 

(*') 

c i ) 

79 

10,000 




$9,000 

8,400 

$600 

$25,000 

$25,000 


80 

0) 

o 

(') 

(>) 

c) 

(>) 

c) 

0) 

C 1 ) 

0) 

81 

949 


25,539 

$1,919 

27,732 

27,732 


90,000 

90.000 


82 


51 

11.146 

11.113 

10,613 

500 

| 

40,000 

40,000 


83 

266 

500 

13,301 


8,641 

8,441 

200 

46,000 

46.000 


84 


300 

15.342 


15,170 

15,170 


75.000 

65,000 

$10,000 

85 

350 

516,850 

39,120 

4,263 

140,103 

60,314 

79,789 

823,394 

231,934 

591,460 

86 

350 

200 

11,000 


11,000 

11,000 


0) 

( ! ) 

0) 

87 

(>) 


0) 


o 

o 

(‘) 

o) 

( i ) 

88 



7,977 


0) 

(!) 

0) 

0) 

35,0(X) 

0) 

89 


446 

12,666 

1,000 

14,533 

14,533 

75 000 

75,000 

90 

683 

40 

23,781 

96 

39,015 

23,944 

15,071 

125,000 

125,000 


91 

590 

300 

5,000 


4.820 

3,820 

1,000 

35 000 

35,000 


92 

1,200 

300 

2,446 

100 

4,250 

4,250 

45,000 

7,000 

38,000 

93 











94 

0) 


0) 

0) 

(■) 

p) 

(■) 

c) 

0) 

C 1 ) 

95 

450 

317 

14,717 


14,698 

14,350 

348 

(>) 

(>) 

(>) 

96 

577 

259 

17,415 

610 

17,815 

16,986 

829 

87,500 

75,000 

12,500 

97 

2,000 

4,309 

27,966 


34,724 

29,864 

4,860 

c) 

100,000 

(>) 

98 

2,000 

6.000 

19,000 

77 

24,000 

24,000 


88,100 

87,000 

1,100 

99 

100 

C 1 ) 

2,000 

(0 

0) 

(■) 

5,000 

(») 


(■) 

100 

300 

501 

6,000 


6.540 

5,840 

700 

62,000 

62,000 


101 

2,20S 

2,395 


5,305 

4,083 

1,222 

12,754 

12,754 


102 

400 

2.066 

16,550 


19,016 

14,738 

4,278 

60.000 

60,000 


103 

0) 

(■) 

0) 

(>) 

(*) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

o) 

C 1 ) 

104 

1,660 

1,766 

7,463 


10,914 

10,051 

863 

0) 

50,000 

o 

105 

(») 

0) 

465 

0 ) 

(») 

0) 

(») 

(>) 

C 1 ) 

(>) 

106 



4,500 


4.800 

3,000 

1,800 

(0 

2,000 

(*) 

107 

13,798 


17,110 

7,400 

43,069 

28,322 

14,747 

(>) 

75,000 

o 

108 



3,971 


4,339 

4.339 

. 

30,000 

30,000 


109 

(*) 

(>) 

0) 

(>) 

(>) 

( i ) 

(>) 

& 40,000 

40,000 


110 


11,174 

17,605 


27,212 

23,531 

3,681 

85,000 

85,000 

. 

111 



52,000 


53,000 

49,000 

4,000 

65,000 

65,000 

. 

112 

2,200 

500 

7,733 

2,135 

12,182 

11,982 

200 

60,900 

38,000 

22,900 

113 


0) 


0) 


C 1 ) 


0 ) 


0 ) 


4 Not opened until 1911. 


* Includes report of dispensary. 















































































































































































278 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table IV.— HOSPITALS AND 


Institution number. 

NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised orconducted by— 

Class of cases treated. 

Year founded. 

Training school for 

nurses. 

Colored patients re¬ 

ceived. 

Number of beds. 

MEDICAL STAFF 
AT CLOSE OF 
YEAR. 

NURSES AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 

O 

e 

C 

at 

'S 

at 

# 

hi) 

.a 

*cn 

73 

O 

Eh 

jx> 

<3 

a 

O' 


ILLINOIS—Continued. 














Pana: 














Pana Deaconess Home and Hos- 

Deaconess Society, Congre- 

General.. . 

1904 

No. 

Yes. 

12 

(!) 


0) 

2 


2 


pital. 

gational Church. 












409 West Orange St. 














Peoria: 













115 

Deaconess Home and Hospital... 

Methodist Episcopal Church. 

General, except contagious 

1898 

Yes. 

No. 

12 

18 


18 

8 


8 


221 North Glen Oak Ave. 


and tubercular. 











11 A 

Isolation Hospital. 

City of Peoria. 

Contagious. 

1909 

No. 

Yes. 

35 

1 


1 

3 


3 


Grant St.* 














John C. Proctor Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1891 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

19 

16 

3 

37 


37 


Second Ave. and* Fisher St. 












11 fi 

St. Francis’ Hospital. 

Hospital Sisters of St. Fran- 

General, except contagious... 

1876 

Yes. 

Yes. 

125 

18 


18 

78 

1 

77 


616 North Glen Oak Ave. 

cis. 













Pontiac: 














St. James Hospital 

Sisters of the Third Order of 

General, except contagious. 

1907 

Yes. 

Yes. 

35 

0) 

0) 

( l ) 

11 


11 


610 East Water St. 

St. Francis. 










Quincy: 













190 

Blessing Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1873 

Yes. 

Yes. 

75 

16 


16 

21 


21 


1014 Spring St. 













121 

St. Mary’s Hospital. 

Sisters of the Poor of St. 

General. 

1866 

No. 

Yes. 

ISO 

11 


11 

26 

6 

20 

FourteenthSt.and Broadway. 

Francis. 













Rock Island: 













122 

St. Anthony’s Hospital. 

Franciscan Sisters of the Im- 

General, except contagious.. 

1893 

Yes. 

Yes. 

40 

22 

12 

10 

15 

1 

14 


767 Thirtieth St. 

maculate Conception. 













Rockford: 







• 






123 

Rockford Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1883 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

22 

2 

20 

24 


24 

Court and*Chestnut Sts. 













124 

St. Anthony’s Hospital. 

Sisters of the Third Order of 

General, except contagious.. 

1899 

No. 

Yes. 

135 

23 

15 

8 

22 

2 

20 


1401 East State St. 

St. Francis. 













Spring Valley: 













125 

St. Margaret’s Hospital. 

Daughters of Mary of the 

General. 

1903 

Yes. 

Yes. 

40 

8 


8 

9 

1 

8 


Presentation. 













Springfield: 













126 

St. John’s Hospital. 

Hospital Sisters of St. Fran- 

General, except contagious.. 

1875 

Yes. 

Yes. 

225 

15 

1 

14 

111 

1 

110 


Eighth and Mason Sts. 

cis. 












127 

Springfield Hospital. 

Lutheran Hospital Associa- 

General, except alcoholic, 

1897 

Yes. 

Yes. 

70 

17 

1 

16 

18 


18 

1201 North Fifth St. 

tion of Central Illinois. 

contagious, and mental. 












Sterling: 













128 

Whiteside Public Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1910 

No. 

Yes. 

13 

10 


10 

3 


3 

904 West Fourth S*t. 














Streator: 













129 

St. Mary’s Hospital. 

Hospital Sisters of St. Fran- 

General, except contagious.. 

1887 

No. 

Yes. 

94 

18 


18 

20 


20 

615 South Bloomington St. 

cis. 












Waukegan: 













130 

Jane McAlister Hospital. 

Private organization. 

General. 

1890 

Yes. 

Yes. 

42 

0) 

( l ) 

20 

14 


14 

Third St. and North Ave. 











131 

Lake County Tuberculosis Inst.... 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1908 

No. 

No. 

32 

1 


1 

2 


2 

125 North Genesee St. (office). 














Winfield: 













132 

Chicago - Winfield Tuberculosis 

Associated Jewish Charities 

Incipient tubercular. 

1908 

No. 

No. 

75 

13 

1 

12 

5 


5 

Sanitarium. 

of Chicago. 













INDIANA. 














Anderson: 













1 

St. John’s Hospital. 

Sisters of the Holy Cross.... 

General, except contagious.. 

1894 

Yes. 

Yes. 

32 

35 


35 

10 


10 


Jackson St* 












Bedford: 













2 

Bedford City Hospital. 

City of Bedford. 

General, except tubercular.. 

1908 

No. 

Yes. 

10 

(') 

( l ) 

0) 

2 


2 


Twenty-third'St. 










Bloomington: 













3 

Bloomington Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except tubercular.. 

1S97 

Yes. 


12 

4 


4 

3 


3 


640 South Rog*ers St. 













CR AWFORDSVILLE: 













4 

L. L. Culver Union Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1900 

Yes. 

No. 

15 




3 


3 


Whitlock Place. 













Danville: 













5 

Rockwood Tuberculosis Sanita- 

Private corporation. 

Tubercular. 

1907 

No. 

No. 

20 

2 

2 


2 


2 


rium. 














Elkhart: 













6 

Clark Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1899 

Yes. 


15 

(>) 

0) 

(*) 

s 


3 


126 Clark St. 










Evansville: 













7 

City Isolation Hospital. 

City of Evansville. 

Smallpox. 

1906 

No. 


50 

1 


1 

2 

1 

1 

8 

Deaconess Hospital. 

Protestant Deaconess Asso- 

General, except contagious.. 

1892 

Yes. 

Yes. 

52 

21 

1 

20 

11 

u 


Mary and Iowa Sts. 

ciation. 












9 

St. Mary’s Hospital. 

Sisters of Charity. 

General, except contagions 

1877 

Yes. 

Yes. 

125 

20 

1 

19 

32 

9 

30 

First Ave. and Columbia St. 




10 

U. S. Marine Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1891 

No. 

Yes. 

40 

2 

2 


1 

1 


West End Illinois St. 












11 

Vanderburg Anti - Tuberculosis 

Vanderburg Anti-Tubercu- 

Curable tubercular. 

1907 

No. 

Yes. 

20 

37 


37 

2 


2 


Hospital. 

losis Society. 













219 Read St. 














Fort Wayne: 













12 

Hope Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1876 

Yes. 

Yes. 

56 

14 

1 

13 

26 


26 


*1002 Barr St. 









13 

Isolation Hospital. 

City of Fort Wayne and 

Contagious. 

1904 

No. 

Yes. 

10 

2 


2 

2 

1 

1 

Bluffton Road, R. D. 

County of Allen. 











14 

Lutheran Hospital. 

Lutheran churches. 

General. 

1903 

Yes. 

Yes. 

79 

16 

1 

15 

50 


50 


3020 Fairfield Ave. 









15 

St. Joseph’s Hospital. 

Sisters, Poor Handmaids of 

General, except contagious.. 

1869 

No. 

Yes. 

94 

50 


50 

25 

2 

23 


702 Broadway. 

Jesus Christ. 









Garrett: 













16 

Sacred Heart Hospital. 

Franciscan Sisters of the 

General, except contagious 

1901 

No. 

Yes. 

28 

6 


6 

10 


10 


Houston and Ijams. 

Sacred Heart. 

and obstetrical. 



1 






1 Not reported. 2 Exclusive of donations other than cash. 
































































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


279 


SANITARIUMS : 1910—Continued. 


PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING YEAR. 

PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE 

OF YEAR. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Adults 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

125 

80 

45 

14 

9 

5 

11 

3 

400 

120 

280 

21 

21 


( l ) 

0) 

127 

51 

76 

2 

1 

1 

2 

1,750 

743 

1,007 

80 

35 

45 

75 

5 

2,040 

743 

1,297 

86 

40 

46 

77 

9 

363 

114 

249 

18 

G) 

G> 

( i ) 

G) 

679 

243 

436 

25 

12 

13 

19 

6 

1,136 

704 

432 

98 

58 

40 

G) 

g> 

670 

300 

370 

30 

18 

12 

28 

2 

1,325 

727 

598 

37 

19 

18 

34 

3 

1,395 

746 

649 

65 

41 

24 

55 

10 

377 

192 

185 

20 

8 

12 

18 

2 

2,708 

1,324 

1,384 

187 

G> 

G) 

G) 


788 

349 

439 

36 

17 

19 

33 

3 

159 

85 

74 

6 

3 

3 

5 

1 

903 

467 

436 

50 

23 

27 

47 

3 

676 

G) 

G) 

35 

G> 

( i ) 

( i ) 

G) 

76 

41 

35 

14 

9 

5 

ia 

1 

172 

89 

83 

49 

22 

27 

35 

14 

300 

130 

170 

15 

4 

11 

15 


0) 

G) 

G) 

2 

1 

1 

2 

. 

94 

42 

52 

8 

5 

a 

\ 

1 

171 

74 

97 

6 

4 

2 

C 


86 

32 

54 

20 

12 

i 

2C 

. 

263 

111 

152 

15 

a 

12 

15 


10 

c 

4 






513 

274 

239 

18 

c 

C 

15 

3 

1,544 

725 

819 

75 

Ti 

45 

* 65 

10 

3 186 

18C 


10 

1C 


1( 

. 

* 170 

10C 

70 

15 

■ 

. 

1( 

1 

L 4 

803 

385 

418 

29 

15 

b 

21 

5 1 

15 

L 

3 






1,170 

385 

J 785 

42 

1 i 

2> 

4( 

) 2 

1,343 

645 

j 695 

62 

31 

31 

61 

2 . 

236 

135 

►j 103 

14 

1C 


b 

\ . 


Total. 


S3,050 

0) 

16, 

43, 
39,727 

8,981 


0) 


17,733 
0) 


C 1 ) 


37,281 


0) 


5,273 


RECEIPTS 

DURING 

YEAR. 


Derived from— 

Appro- 

Dona- 

Care of 

Other 

pria- 

tions. 

tions. 

patients. 

sources. 

$200 

$2,000 

$850 


1,500 

5,000 


oc 

S 

-t 

1,209 


2,300 

400 

38,400 

$2,500 


4,025 

30,402 

5,300 


800 

8,181 



4,810 

15,976 

2,846 


2 12,500 

9,400 


. 

( l ) 


500 

325 

21,396 

10,710 

\ 500 

884 

32,281 


5 . 


17,733 


G) 

G) 

g> 

G) 

1 . 

943 

20,888 


1 580 

250 

4,711 

1,420 

G) 

( i ) 

G> 

0) 

8 500 

2,040 

18,188 


2 2,079 

3,094 

7,602 

1,887 

1 . 

32,018 

4,056 

1,207 

9 . 

150 

8,499 


5 580 

28 

1,937 


5 365 

2,000 

3,360 


2 100 

291 

3,830 

1,271 

o. 


11,000 



( i ) 

G) 

p) 

0 5,000 




51 2 ,128 

8,075 

10,650 

. 

0 2,358 

476 

15,306 


1 12 721 




3 2,00C 

10,00C 

. 

6,523 

7 .. 

882 

23,64C 

835 

0 60C 



4 . 

. 

14,50C 

37,595 

142 

0 511 

3 . 

35C 

27,31C 

5,275 

2,199 

. 





PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 


Total. 


S2,700 

6,500 

7,049 

43,000 

32,030 

6,354 

30,220 

20,270 

P) 

29,257 
34,473 

21,864 

( l ) 

21,831 

0 ) 

0 ) 

17,295 

14,395 

37,313 


7,746 

P) 

4,900 

0) 

11,000 

P) 

4,000 

18,448 

27,870 

12,721 

19,736 

25,821 

600 

33,698 

29,748 

5,05' 


For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 


For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 


S2,500 

6,500 
6,283 
42,000 
26,135 

4,354 

23,220 

18,270 

P) 

29,257 

34,473 

10,305 

P) 

18,831 

6,258 

P) 

0) 

8,344 

23,164 


7,746 
2,316 
3,400 
5,308 
8,000 
P) 

4,000 

14,879 

25,985 

C 1 ) 

10,013 

25,471 

600 

33,290 

27,271 

4,645 


s2nn 


VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 


Total. 


766 

1,000 

5,895 

2,000 

7,000 

2,000 


11,559 

P) 

3,000 

P) 

0) 

( l ) 

6,051 

14,149 


P) 

1,500 

P) 

3,000 

P) 


3,569 

1,885 

0) 

9,723 

350 


408 
2,477 

412 


Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 


$4,000 

62,000 
30,000 
275,000 
200,000 

P) 

90,000 

70,000 

( l ) 

108,910 

175,000 

30,000 

0) 

75,000 

0) 

P) 

30,658 

15,000 

69,310 


30,000 

( l ) 

( l ) 
28,500 
15,000 

P) 

10,000 

58,200 

50,000 

P) 

25,000 

52,985 

7,000 

90,000 

P) 

52,000 


In¬ 

vested 

funds. 


$4,000 

52,000 

30,000 

250,000 

200,000 

( l ) 

50,000 

70,000 

0) 

98,200 

0) 

30,000 

( l ) 

75,000 

800 

P) 

25,000 

15,000 

45,510 


30,000 


$ 10,000 

25,000 


6 


20,000 

20,000 

15,000 

C 1 ) 

10,000 

58,200 

50,000 

C 1 ) 

25,000 

50,085 

7,000 

90,000 

126,615 

52,000 


( l ) 

40,000 


10,710 

0) 


P) 


P) 

P) 

5,658 


23,800 


3,750 

C 1 ) 

8,500 


0) 


2,900 


( l ) 


114 

115 

116 

117 

118 

119 

120 
121 

122 

123 

124 

125 

126 

127 

128 

129 

130 

131 

132 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 

9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 


3 Exclusive of out-patients. 


4 Exclusive of 1,219 patients treated at City Clinic, 316 Sycamore St. 





















































































































































































































280 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table IV.— HOSPITALS AND 







f- 

o 

1 

© 

(- 


MEDICAL STAFF 
AT CLOSE OF 

NURSES AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 

£ 






to 


YEAR. 




a 

a 

a 

NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of cases treated. 

r d 

© 

TJ 

o . 

rfl GO 

o © 

GO CO 

I’d 

Ph.5 

© 

rO 

«*-« 







o 

-*-> 

o 




O 

««-< 


© 

© 

© 

o 

© 


0 

© 

bh 

1 



^© 

-4-9 

CO 

o 

►H 




S- 

c3 

© 


o 

o 

O 

a 

3 

% 

o3 

O 

H 

'to 

© 

i> 

o3 

O 

H 

© 

a 

a 

© 


INDIANA—Continued. 














Gary: 










8 

8 


17 

Gary Hospital 1 . 


General. 

1909 

No. 

Yes. 

157 

7 

5 

2 



Broadway. 





33 



11 



IS 

Mercy Hospital. 

Sisters of St. Francis of the 

General, except contagious.. 

1907 

Yes. 

Yes. 

30 


33 

7 

4 


634 Carolina St. 

Sacred Heart. 










Hammond: 







( 2 ) 



15 


15 

19 

St. Margaret’s Hospital . 

Sisters of St,. Francis. 

General, except contagious.. 

1898 

Yes. 

Yes. 

175 


( 2 ) 



Clinton St. 









Indianapolis: 







1 






20 

Flanner Guild Maternity Hospital. 
851 Colton St. 


Maternity_ 

1897 

No. 

Yes. 

6 


1 












21 

Flower Mission Hospital . 


Tubercular. 

1904 

No. 

Yes. 

26 

3 

1 

2 

3 


3 


Tenth and Locke Sts. 







55 



22 

Indianapolis City Hospital. 

City of Indianapolis. 

General . 

1SS0 

Yes. 

Yes. 

250 

78 

8 

70 


55 










1000 Coe St. 











i 

1 

23 

Indianapolis Detention Hospital.. 
1505 Hiawatha St. 

City of Indianapolis. 

Smallpox. 

( 2 ) 

No. 

Yes. 

32 

2 


2 

2 








15 



24 

Lincoln Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1909 

Yes. 

Yes. 

20 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

30 


15 


1101 North Senate Ave. 





36 



25 

M6thodist Episcopal Hospital. 

Methodist Episcopal Church 

General, except contagious 

1899 

Yes. 

Yes. 

65 

21 

4 

17 


36 


1605 North Capitol Ave. 

and mental. 








47 



26 

Protestant Deaconess Hospital.... 

Protestant Deaconess Society 

General, except contagious.. 

1895 

Yes. 

No. 

125 

54 

4 

50 


47 


200 North Senate Ave. 








36 



27 

St. Vincent’s Hospital. 

Sisters of Charity.. 

General, except contagious 
and infectious. 

1865 

Yes. 

Yes. 

150 

58 

3 

55 


36 

South and Delaware Sts. 






28 

U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

U. S. Government . 

General . 

1908 

( s ) 

Yes. 

44 

1 

1 


2 

62 


Fort B'enjamin Harrison. 











Jeffersonville: 













29 

Eruptive Hospital. 

City of Jeffersonville. 

Smallpox. 

1866 

No. 

Yes. 

17 

3 

3 


2 

1 

1 


R. D. No. 1, Box 181. 










30 

Jeffersonville Deaconess Hospital. 
415 East Front St. 

Protestant churches. 

General . 

1900 

Yes. 

No. 

12 

12 


12 

6 


6 













Kokomo: 













31 

Kokomo Emergency Hospital 7 ..; 
Lafayette: 

City of Kokomo. 

Emergency, except infectious 

1910 

Yes. 

Yes. 

18 

24 


24 

3 


3 







32 

Lafayette Home Hospital. 

Private corporation . 

General, except contagious.. 

1895 

Yes. 

Yes. 

40 

11 

11 


14 


14 

2402 South St. 






33 

St. Elizabeth’s Hospital. 

Sisters of St. Francis. 

General . 

1S75 

Yes. 

Yes. 

175 

45 

10 

35 

32 


32 

Fourteenth and Hartford Sts. 






Laporte: 













34 

Holy Family Hospital. 

Sisters, Poor Handmaids of 
Jesus Christ. 

General . 

1900 

No. 

Yes. 

45 

25 


25 

10 

2 

8 


205 E St. 






Logansport: 













35 

St. Joseph’s Hospital. 

Sisters of St. Francis. 

General. 

1S93 

No. 

Yes. 

80 

34 


34 

13 

1 

12 

Twenty-sixth, High and North 







Sts. 














Madison: 













36 

King’s Daughters’ Hospital. 

King’s Daughters. 

General. 

1899 

Yes. 

No. 

10 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

12 

2 


2 

112 Presbyterian Ave. 







Marion: 













37 

Grant Countv Hospital 9 . 

Private corporation. 

General.,. . 

1910 

Yes. 

Yes. 

20 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

8 


8 

Washington and Twentieth Sts 






Michigan City: 













38 

St. Anthony’s Hospital. 

Sisters of St. Francis. 

General . 

1903 

No. 

Yes. 

60 

15 


15 

11 


11 

Wabash St. 







Muncie: 













39 

Muncie Hospital. 

Private organization. 

General . 

1891 

No. 

Yes. 

20 

2 

2 


2 

1 

1 

515 Council St. 








New Albany: 













40 

St. Edward’s City Hospital. 

Sisters of St. Francis of the 

General, except contagious.. 

1901 

No. 

Yes. 

120 

24 


24 

13 


13 

Seventh and "Spring Sts. 

Perpetual Adoration. 




Peru: 












41 

Wabash Employees’ Hospital. 

Employees’ Hospital Asso¬ 
ciation. 

General. 

1884 

No. 

Yes. 

60 

3 

1 

2 


2 

5 








Portland: 













42 

Jay County Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1905 

Yes. 

Yes. 

10 

8 


8 

4 


4 

122 West High St. 








Richmond: 













43 

Reid Memorial Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1905 

Yes. 

Yes. 

65 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

12 

14 

1 


14 

Rochester: 



44 

Woodlawn Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1905 

No. 

Yes. 

15 

11 

1 

10 

5 


5 

426 Pontiac St. 






South Bend: 













45 

Anti-Tuberculosis Camp. 

South Bend Anti-Tubercu- 

Incipient pulmonary tuber¬ 
cular. 

1908 

No. 

Yes. 

12 

6 

6 


2 


2 

River Park. 

losis League. 



1 



46 

Epworth Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1893 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

27 

28 


28 

604 NorthMain St. 




47 

St. Joseph’s Hospital. 

Sisters of the Holy Cross.... 

General, except contagious.. 

1882 

Yes. 

Yes. 

58 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

16 


16 

Terre Halite: 


48 

St. Anthony’s Hospital. 

Sisters of St. Francis of the 

General, except contagious 
and infectious. 

1882 

No. 

Yes. 

256 

22 

2 

20 

32 

2 

30 

1015 South Sixth St. 

Perpetual Adoration. 



49 

Union Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious 
and venereal. 

1895 

Yes. 

Yes. 

60 

21 

2 

19 

21 


21 

Seventh St. and Eighth Ave. 





Valparaiso: 













50 

Christian Hospital. 

National Benevolent Asso- 

General, except contagious.. 

1905 

Yes. 

Yes. 

23 



7 

8 


8 

106 Jeflers’on St. 

ciation of Christian Church. 






Vincennes: 













51 

Good Samaritan Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious 
and insane. 

1908 

Yes. 

Yes. 

20 




7 


7 


DuBois and Seventh Sts. 









1 Employees of Indiana Steel Co. 

2 Not reported. 

3 Appropriation for city contagious fund. 


4 Includes report of dispensary. 

3 Instruction for Hospital Corps. 
« Enlisted men, Hospital Corps. 





































































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


281 


SANITARIUMS: 1910—Continued. 


VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

( 2 ) 

< 2 ) 

( 2 > 

17 

( 2 ) 

$30,075 

( 2 > 

18 

$195,000 

195,000 


19 

5,000 

| 

5,000 


20 

12,000 

12,000 


21 

350,000 

350,000 


22 

5,405 1 

5,405 


23 

< 5,000 

5,000 


24 

222,645 

215,645 

$7,000 

25 

225,000 

225,000 


26 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


27 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


28 

6,000 

6,000 


29 

7,500 

7,500 


30 

8 10,000 

8 10,000 


31 

51,000 

50,000 

1,000 

32 

100,000 

100,000 


33 

80,000 

80,000 


34 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


35 

9,000 

3,500 

5,500 

36 

io 662 

io 662 


37 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

38 

10,000 

10,000 


39 

30,000 

30,000 


40 

(») 

(»> 

( n ) 

41 

ioi,000 

io 1,000 

. 

42 

112,000 

87,000 

25,000 

43 

20,000 

20,000 


44 




45 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

46 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

47 

200,000 

200,000 


48 

80,000 

80,000 


49 

14,000 

14,000 


50 

40,000 

i 

40,000 


51 


PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING YEAR. 


PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 


Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Adults 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

120 

120 


40 

40 

i 

40 


715 

518 

197 

15 

13 

2 

14 

1 

1,325 

825 

500 

83 

58 

25 

83 


2 


2 

2 


2 

2 


117 

68 

49 

20 

12 

8 

19 

1 

3,520 

2,212 

1,308 

246 

168 

78 

215 

31 

7 

4 

3 






115 

40 

75 

14 

4 

10 

14 


1,032 

325 

707 

53 

9 

44 

49 

4 

1,491 

750 

741 

43 

21 

22 

42 

1 

1,121 

377 

744 

72 

34 

38 

62 

10 

406 

406 


1 

1 


1 


1 

1 







120 

61 

59 

4 

2 

2 

4 


16 

10 

6 

7 

3 

4 

6 

1 

358 

131 

227 

15 

6 

9 

15 


1,187 

572 

615 

84 

41 

43 

79 

5 

587 

235 

302 

32 

10 

22 

32 


401 

224 

177 

21 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

56 

30 

26 

3 


3 

2 

1 

208 

99 

109 

12 

7 

5 

12 


350 

150 

200 

25 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

38 

33 

5 

5 

5 


5 


340 

153 

187 

40 

9 

31 

39 

1 

462 

462 


18 

18 


18 


61 

35 

26 

1 


1 

1 


521 

203 

318 

21 

11 

10 

21 


90 

20 

70 

8 

3 

5 

8 


17 

10 

7 

7 

1 

6 

6 

1 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

< 2 ) 

25 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

c 2 ) 

392 

183 

209 

24 

11 

13 

23 

1 

1,704 

943 

761 

107 

66 

41 

94 

13 

1,302 

584 

718 

40 

19 

21 

37 

3 

240 

136 

104 

12 

5 

7 

12 


180 

85 

95 

9 

5 

4 

9 



RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 


Total. 

Derived from— 

Total. 

Appro¬ 

pria¬ 

tions. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
patients. 

Other 

sources. 

( 2 ) 


• < 2 ) 



( 2 ) 

$1,037,206 


$1,037,206 


( 2 ) 

15,380 


$500 

14,880 


$34,600 

25 


25 


27 

5,000 

$5,000 




5,000 

96,007 

94,400 


1,607 


93,595, 

5,000 

8 5,000 




1,559' 

3,537 

2,091 

1,367 

$79 

3,515 

72,472 


24,037 

45,907 

2,528 

56,734 

68,040 



67,940 

100 

67,915 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

< 2 ) 

<*) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

c 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

< 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

3,929 



3,743 

186 

(2) 

1,195 

1,100 


95 


927 

14,115 

300 

3,133 

9,50S 

1,174 

13,460 

31,500 


2,000 

29,500 


33,680 

11,257 


2,257 

9,000 


26,035 

c 2 ) 


( s ) 

( 2 ) 


( 2 > 



2,763 

300 

620 

1,538 

305 

2,382 

7,401 


865 

6,056 

480 

7,004 

c 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

w 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

1,700 



1,700 


1,200 

20,000 

1,500 

400 

18,ICO 


23,537 

o i ) 


(“) 

( u ) 

o 1 ) 

( u > 

2,277 

500 


1,503 

274 

2,277 

19,908 

3,025 


12,872 

4,011 

20,083 

3,150 



3,150 


2,540 

2,093 

1,025 

518 

550 


2,430 

c 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

< 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

c 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

43,407 

4,800 

700 

36,085 

1,822 

43,122 

19,262 

2,550 

3,347 

13,365 


19,470 

5,970 


864 

5,106 


5,863; 

6,993 

2,068 


4,925 


6,993 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 


For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 


( 2 ) 

.026,0 

26,600 

20 
5,000 
93,595 
1,559 
( 2 ) 
52,482 
67,915 
( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

3,917 

92' 
12,255 
29,680 

12,410 

( 2 ) 

2,382 

7,004 

( 2 ) 

1,200 

18,340 

(“) 

2,200 

19,503 
2,540 

1,687 

(*) 

( 2 ) 
28,075 
18,920 

5,863 

6,993 


For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 


<*) 

( 2 > 

*8,000 


( 2 ) 
4,252 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


1,205 

4,000 

13,625 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


( ll ) 


(=) 

( 2 ) 


i Opened August, 1910; statistics for four months. 

» Property owned by Kokomo Hospital Association. 
> Opened July 1, 1910; statistics for nine months. 


10 Equipment. 

n included in report of Wabash Employees’ Dispensary, Danville, Ill. 































































































































































































































Institution number. 


282 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS,. 1910 


Table IV.— HOSPITALS AND 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 
21 
22 

23 

24 

25 

26 

27 

28 

29 

30 

31 

32 

33 

34 

35 

36 

37 


NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of cases treated. 

Year founded. 

Training school for 

nurses. 

Colored patients re¬ 

ceived. 

Number of beds. 

MEDICAL STAFF 
AT CLOSE OF 
YEAR. 

NURSES AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 

*03 

-*-3 

O 

-+-i 

G 

<V 

'% 

bi) 

.9 

> 

O 

H 

© 

"c3 

a 

© 

a 

© 

IOWA. 













Anamosa: 













Prospect Park Sanitarium. 

Sisters of Mercy. 

General, except contagious.. 

1893 

No. 

Yes. 

30 

0) 


(1) 

8 

i 

7 

Broadway. 












Atlantic: 













Atlantic Hospital . 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1903 

Yes. 

Yes. 

25 

20 

10 

10 

7 


7 

501 Oak St. 













Boone: 













Eleanor Moore Hospital 

Private corporation . 

General, except contagious.. 

1900 

Yes. 

Yes. 

30 

20 


20 

9 


9 

First and Marshall Sts. 












Burlington: 













Burlington Hospital. . . . 

Priva e corporation 

General . 

1S95 

Yes. 

Yes. 

65 

16 

16 


24 


24 

600 North Third St. 













Mercy Hospital. 

Sisters of St. Francis. 

General. 

1893 

Yes. 

Yes. 

35 

C 1 ) 


0) 

12 

i 

11 

Fourth and Court Sts. 











St. Francis’ Hospital .. 

Hospital Sisters of St. Francis 

General, except contagious.. 

1886 

No. 

Yes. 

65 

8 


8 

14 


14 

210 South Fifth St. ' 












Carroll: 













St. Anthony’s Hospital. 

Franciscan Sisters of the Per- 

(i). 

1905 

( l ) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

C 1 ) 

( l ) 

(0 

C 1 3 4 ) 

0) 


petual Adoration. 







Cedar Rapids: 













Mercy Hospital. 

Sisters of Mercy. 

General. 

1900 

Yes. 

Yes. 

75 




• 22 


22 

Sixth Ave., Eighth and Ninth 













Sts. 













St. Luke’s Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1S84 

Yes. 

Yes. 

64 

24 


24 

22 


22 

1011 A Ave* 













Centerville: 













St. Joseph’s Mercy Hospital. 

Sisters of Mercy. 

General. 

1910 

Yes. 

Yes. 

26 

( l ) 

(‘) 

10 

7 


7 

712 South Main St. 











Charles City: 













May Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1909 

No. 

Yes. 

13 

0) 

0) 

f 1 ) 

2 


2 

River St. 










Clinton: 













Agatha Hospital . 

Private organization. 

General, except contagious.. 

1SS9 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

0) 

( l ) 

( l ) 

21 


21 

Council Bluffs: 









Detention Hospital. 

City of Council Bluffs. 

Smallpox and other conta- 

1902 

No. 

Yes. 

4 

1 


1 

2 

1 

1 

Oak St. 


gious. 











Jennie Edmundson Memorial Hos- 

Woman’s Christian Associa- 

General, except contagious, 

1884 

Yes. 

Yes. 

55 

0) 

16 

(>) 

23 


23 

pital. 

tion. 

infectious, and insane. 











Oak and Pierce Sts. 













Mercv Hospital. 

Sisters of Mercv. 

General, except contagious.. 

1SS7 

Yes. 

Yes. 

150 

23 

13 

10 

20 


20 

Harmony and Frank Sts. 












Davenport: 













Mercv Hospital . 

Sisters of Mercy. 

General. 

1869 

Yes. 

Yes. 

125 

49 

41 

8 

53 

4 

49 

Marquette St. 













St. Luke’s Hospital. 

Protestant Episcopal Church 

General, except alcoholic, 

1S94 

Yes. 

Yes. 

40 

12 


12 

14 


14 

Eighth and* Main Sts. 

contagious, and insane.. *. 











St. Robert’s Hospital. 

City of Davenport. 

Smallpox. 

0) 

No. 

(•) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

1 

C 1 ) 

0) 

P) 

Marquette St. 





Des Moines: 













Des Moines Detention Hospital... 

County of Polk. 

Smallpox. 

1902 

No. 

Yes. 

35 

2 

1 

1 

P) 

P) 

P) 

Fourteenth and Jefferson Sts. 










Iowa Methodist Hospital. 

Methodist Episcopal churches 

General.)... 

1901 

Yes. 

Yes. 

145 

31 

4 

27 

62 


62 

1200 Pleasant St.* 












Mercv Hospital. 

Sisters of Mercy. 

General. 

1893 

Yes. 

Yes. 

125 

47 

17 

30 

47 

2 

45 

Ascension St. 













Ridge CampTuberculosis Hospital. 

Associated Charities of Des 

Tubercular. 

1908 

No. 

No. 

14 

( l ) 

( l ) 

0) 

0) 

( l ) 

0) 

948 Oak Park Ave. 

Moines. 












Dubuque: 













Finley Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1890 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

9 


9 

20 


20 

200 Delhi St. 













St. Joseph’s Mercy Hospital. 

Sisters of Mercy. 

General, except contagious.. 

1880 

Yes. 

Yes. 

190 

27 

12 

15 

42 


42 

James St. and Peabody Ave. 












Fort Des Moines: 













U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General, except insane and 

1903 

( s ) 

Yes. 

40 

1 

1 


4 

8 4 




tubercular. 










Fort Dodge: 













Boulder Lodge Sanatorium. 

Private organization. 

Tubercular. 

1902 

No. 

No. 

15 

3 

1 

2 

2 


2 

Fort Madison: “ 













Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe 

Atchison, Topeka & Santa 

General. 

1891 

No. 

Yes. 

40 

3 

2 

i 

3 

2 

i 

Hospital. 7 

Fe Hospital Association. 












Iowa City: 













Homeopathic Hospital. 

University of Iowa. 

General. 

1895 

Yes. 

Yes. 

30 

7 

4 

3 

12 


12 

Mercy Hospital. 

Sisters of Mercy. 

Surgical. 

1870 

Yes. 

Yes. 

150 

25 

5 

20 

33 

2 

31 

305 Bloomington St. 











University Hospital. 

University of Iowa. 

General. 

1S97 

Yes. 

Yes. 

125 

19 

2 

17 

45 


45 

Iowa Ave. 










Keokuk: 













Graham Hospital. 

Woman’s Home Missionary 

General. 

1901 

Yes. 

Yes. 

30 

0) 

(») 

0) 

9 


9 

424 North Fifteenth St. 

Society of the M. E .Church. 









Keokuk Emergency Hospital. 

City of Keokuk. 

Smallpox. 

1890 

No. 

Yes. 

7 

1 

1 


1 

1 


St. Joseph’s Hospital_*. 

Hospital Sisters of St.Fran- 

General, except contagious.. 

1882 

Yes. 

Yes. 

116 

0) 

12 

( l ) 

13 


13 

14 Exchange. 

cis. 







Knoxville: 













State Hospital for Inebriates. 

State of Iowa. 

Male inebriates. 

1906 

No. 

Yes. 

215 

2 

2 


2 

2 


Le Mars: 













Le Mars Hospital. 

Private organization. 

General. 

1908 

No. 

Yes. 

16 

22 

12 

10 

6 


ft] 

512 Main'St. 












Lyons: 













St. Joseph’s Mercv Hospital. 

Sisters of Mercv. 

General, except contagious.. 

1892 

Yes. 

Yes. 

75 

25 


25 

16 


16 

Ninth and Jackson Sts. 










Marshalltown: 













St. Thomas’ Mercv Hospital. 

Sisters of Mercy. 

General. 

1902 

Yes. 

Yes. 

48 

15 


15 

8 


8 

Thirteenth and State Sts. 












1 Not reported. 

2 Includes value of property used for Mother House, and for St. Robert’s Hospital. 

3 Included in report of Mercy Hospital. 

4 Equipment. 

‘ Instruction for Hospital Corps. 



































































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


283 


SANITARIUMS: 1910—Continued. 


PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING YEAR. 

PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE 

OF YEAR. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Adults 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

325 

75 

250 

27 

8 

19 

20 

7 

180 

74 

106 

10 

6 

4 

10 


344 

201 

143 

11 

7 

• 4 

11 


742 

471 

271 

42 

16 

26 

36 

6 

348 

214 

134 

20 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

480 

150 

330 

60 

25 

35 

45 

15 

0) 

( l ) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

O 

(>) 

53 

0) 

0) 

0) 

( l ) 

1,033 

345 

688 

45 

21 

24 

38 

7 

291 

0) 

0) 

19 

(») 

C 1 ) 

0) 

0) 

82 

0) 

0) 

5 

0) 

( l ) 

0) 

0) 

643 

0) 

0) 

39 

0) 

0) 

0) 

( l ) 

25 

21 

4 






775 

463 

312 

42 

(») 

0) 

0) 

0) 

640 

398 

242 

72 

48 

24 

72 


843 

389 

454 

70 

36 

34 

4 

66 

441 

0) 

0) 

20 

( l ) 

( l ) 

0) 

(*) 

7 

5 

2 

( l ) 

0) 

( l ) 

0) 

0) 

100 

62 

38 

75 

( l * ) 

( l ) 

72 

3 

2,313 

959 

1,354 

no 

(l) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

2,125 

1,033 

1,092 

54 

27 

27 

52 

2 

32 

(*) 

0) 

( l ) 

0) 

( l ) 

(») 

( l ) 

619 

291 

328 

23 

11 

12 

21 

2 

987 

987 


95 

0) 

C) 

C) 

(>) 

374 

374 


1 

1 


1 


65 

25 

40 

18 

8 

10 

9 

9 

421 

0) 

0) 

13 

13 


13 


340 

0) 

(>) 

18 

8 

10 

18 


2,288 

1,299 

989 

180 

80 

100 

0) 

(*) 

1,730 

(») 

0) 

100 

(>) 

0) 

0) 

( l ) 

221 

91 

130 

17 

12 

5 

17 


1 

1 







560 

250 

310 

45 

15 

30 

40 

5 

499 

499 


175 

175 


175 


116 

30 

86 

10 

3 

7 

7 

3 

433 

198 

235 

14 

7 

7 

14 


313 

132 

181 

22 

9 

13 

18 

4 


RECEIPTS DURING 

YEAR. 


PAYMENTS DURING 

YEAR. 


Derived from— 




For 






For 

perma- 






running 

nent 

Appro- 

Dona- 

Care of 

Other 


ex- 

im- 

pria- 

tions. 

tions. 

patients. 

sources. 


penses. 

prove- 

ments. 


$1,100 

$6,500 


$7,600 

$7,600 




7,415 


6,700 

5,200 

$1,500 



9,286 


9,215 

9,215 

$489 

504 

29,554 

$1,949 

33,000 

P 

( l ) 



(i) 


(!) 

(i) 

(i) 


300 

8,261 


1,060 

950 

110 

C 1 ) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

( l ) 

0) 

0) 



24,000 

500 

24,500 

24,000 

500 

. 

147 

1,677 

29,505 


49,439 

31,006 

18,433 

(>) 

0) 

(0 

(0 

0) 

0) 

0) 

V 









4,000 


4,000 

4,000 


.. . 

1,437 

16,323 

1,005 

18,749 

18,048 

701 

4,433 




4,433 

4,433 


12,360 

23,044 

100 

33,777 

33,777 


.. 

(i) 


(*) 

(1) 

0) 

) 960 


32,230 


68,900 

68,900 


i .. 

2,827 

12,099 

338 

12,725 

12,725 


3 626 


626 

626 


3 848 




848 

848 


5 . 

24,750 

66,887 

3,158 

94,795 

75,704 

19,091 

D . 

(') 

(i) 


50,000 

(i) 

(i) 

7 501 

567 

619 

4,433 

3,839 

594 

3 . 

2,000 

20,293 

3,075 

22,561 

21,561 

1,000 


500 


16,971 

(*) 

16,645 

(») 

. 

( l ) 

0 . 


(i) 


(i) 

0) 


12,000 


1 V 7 

9,000 

6,000 

3,000 


( 8 ) 


( 8 > 



0 

10,000 


»7,000 

7.000 


0 


29i500 

500 

u> 30,000 

27,480 

2,520 

6 . 


45,576 


(1) 

42,102 

0) 

5 

1,423 

10,642 


11,402 

11,402 


0 500 



500 

500 


0 .... 

20 

3,600 

. 

(*) 

3,624 

( l ) 

0 48,000 

o 



• 59,106 

55,466 

3,640 

500 

1,000 


1,100 

1,100 


a) 


(‘) 

. 

(!) 

(i) 


(>) 


12,977 

0) 

0) 

11,736 

0) 


VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 


Land, 



build- 

In- 

Total. 

mgs, 

and 

vested 

funds. 


equip- 



ment. 


$35,000 

$35,000 


10,000 

10,000 


40,000 

40,000 


100,000 

100,000 


0) 

0) 


40,000 

40,000 


0) 

(») 

0) 

100,000 

100,000 


125,000 

125,000 


20,000 

20,000 


8,000 

7,000 

$1,000 

50,000 

50,000 


4,500 

4,500 


75,000' 

75,000 


C 1 ) 

0) 

0) 

2 500,000 

500,000 


51,325 

39,000 

12,325 

(3) 

( 3 ) 


25,000 

25,000 


279,350 

210,000 

69,350 

200,000 

200,000 


<1,000 

< 1,000 


200,000 

60,000 

140,000 

0) 

0) 


<») 

0) 


) 30,000 

30,000 


( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( l ) 

(») 

0) 

) 10 200,000 

200,000 


0) 

280,983 

0) 

40,000 

40,000 


600 

600 





3 154,627 

154,627 


700 

700 

. 

(!) 

(i) 


C) 

20,000 

0) 


Total. 


$7,600 


0 ) 


0 ) 


0 ) 


(>) 


( l ) 


( 8 ) 


45,576 

12,065 


0 ) 

(*) 


c 

_o 

*■£ 

—- 
w 

a 

i—i 

1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 
21 
22 

23 

24 

25 

26 

27 

28 

29 

30 

31 

32 

33 

34 

35 

36 

37 


6 Enlisted men, Hospital Corps, 

i Employees. 

8 Included in report of Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Hospital, Topeka, Kans. 
8 Includes report of dispensary. 

u> Includes report of St. Anthony’s Home for the Aged. 
























































































































































































































Institution number. 


284 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table IV.— HOSPITALS AND 


38 

39 


40 

41 

42 

43 

44 

45 

46 

47 

48 

49 

50 

51 

52 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 


19 

20 


NAME AND LOCATION, 

Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of cases treated. 

Year founded. 

Training school for 
nurses. 

Colored patients re¬ 
ceived. 

Number of beds. 

MEDICAL STAFF 
AT CLOSE OF 
YEAR. 

NURSES AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 

O 

EH 

£ 

© 

2 

C/3 

© 

g 

to 

2 

’c/3 

> 

2 

O 

H 

© 

a 

© 

a 

© 

pH 

IOWA—Continued. 













Mason City: 













City Detention Hospital. 

City of Mason City. 

General. 

1901 

No. 

No. 

24 

4 

1 

3 

4 

i 

3 

"East end of Ninth St. 













Muscatine: 













Benjamin Hershev Memorial nos- 


General 

1902 

Yes. 

Yes. 

30 

12 


12 

8 


8 

pital. 













1810 Mulberry Ave. 













Nevada: 













Iowa Sanitarium. 

Seventh-day Adventists. 

General. 

1900 

Yes. 

Yes. 

60 

4 

3 

1 

25 

5 

20 

Oakdale: 













State Sanatorium for Tuberculosis.. 

State of Iowa... 

Tubercular. 

1907 

Yes. 

Yes. 

120 

6 

3 

3 

6 


6 

Osage: 













Wood’s Hospital . 


General, except contagious.. 

1902 

No. 

Yes. 

5 




1 


1 

906 Main St. 













Ottumwa: 













Ottumwa Hospital .. 

Private corporation 

General 

1S94 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

0) 

(>) 

13 

11 


11 

Second and College Sts. 











Sioux City: 













City Hospital 


Smallpox, diphtheria, and 

1902 

No. 

Yes. 

12 







313 Sixth St. 


scarlet fever. 











German Lutheran Hospital. 

German Lutheran Church... 

General . 

1902 

Yes. 

Yes. 

34 

0) 

10 

0) 

18 


18 

Pierce and Twenty-seventh Sts. 












St. John’s Hospital and Deaconess’ 

Private corporation. 

General, except infectious... 

1909 

Yes. 

Yes. 

35 

6 

2 

4 

12 


12 

Home. 













Fourteenth and Jones Sts. 













St. Joseph’s Mercy Hospital. 

Sisters of Mercy. 

General. 

1890 

Yes. 

Yes. 

150 

10 


10 

48 


48 

Twenty-first and Court Sts. 













St. Vincent’s Hospital. 

Sisters of St. Benedict... 

General 

1897 

Yes. 

Yes. 

40 

10 


10 

16 


16 

621 Pierce St. * 













Samaritan Hospital. 

Woman’s Christian Asso- 

General 

1879 

Yes. 

Yes. 

65 

55 

2 

53 

31 


31 

Seventeenth and Pierce Sts. 

ciation. 












Waterloo: 













Synodical Presbyterian Hospital.. 

Presbvterian Synod of Iowa. 

General, except contagious 

1904 

Yes. 

Yes. 

36 

0) 

0) 

(■) 

18 


18 

Leavitt St. 


and insane. 











Waverly: 













St. Joseph’s Mercy Hospital. 

Sisters of Mercy. 

Surgical_ 

1904 

Yes. 

Yes. 

30 

19 

9 

10 

10 


10 

312 South Orange. 













Webster City: 













St. Joseph’s Mercy Hospital. 

Sisters of Mercv. 

General. 

1905 

No. 

( l ) 

36 

6 


6 

6 


6 

KANSAS. 












Arkansas City: 













Arkansas City Hospital. 

Private corporation . 

General 

1906 

Yes. 

Yes. 

26 

1 


1 

9 


9 

828 South B St." 













Clay Center: 













Clay Center Hospital. 

Private corporation.. .. 

General 

1904 

Yes. 

Yes. 

18 

0) 

4 


6 


6 

Coffeyville: 












Good Samaritan Hospital. 

Private corporation . 

General 

1900 

No. 

No. 

13 


1 

4 

3 


3 

1415 Maple St. 













Concordia: 


) 











St. Joseph’s Hospital. 

Sisters of St. Joseph. 


1903 

Yes. 

Yes. 

40 

13 

1 

12 

20 


20 

333 East Fifth St. 


and insane. 











Ellsworth: 













Ellsworth Hospital. 

Private corporation 

General 

1902 

Yes. 

Yes. 

15 

12 

5 

7 

3 


3 

Emporia: 













St. Mary’s Hospital. 

Sisters of St. Francis of the 

General, except contagious.. 

1906 

No. 

Yes. 

47 

31 


31 

12 

i 

11 

122 "Exchange St. 

Perpetual Adoration. 











Fort Leavenworth: 













U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General.. 

I 1 ) 

( 3 ) 

Yes. 

160 

8 

8 


( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


Thomas and Pope Aves. 









U. S. Army Prison Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1906 

( 3 ) 

No. 

46 

2 

2 


18 

i IS 


Fort Riley: 












U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General.... 

0) 

( 3 ) 

Yes. 

110 

7 

7 


10 

4 10 


Fort Scott: 











Mercy Hospital. 



IS,87 

No 

Yes. 

50 

(’) 

0) 

12 

10 


10 

816 Burk St. 


and insane. 







Goessel: 













Mennonite Bethesda Hospital. 

Private corporat ion. 

General. 

1899 

Yes. 

No. 

23 

3 

1 

2 

11 

1 

10 

Great Bend: 













St. Rose Hospital. 

Sisters of St. Dominic_ 

General. 

1903 

No. 

Yes. 

32 

9 

4 

5 

10 


10 

3004 Broadway. 













Halstead: 













Hertzler Hospital. 

Mennonite Church. 

Surgical. . 

1903 

Yes. 

No. 

20 

3 


3 

4 


4 

Hays: 













St. Anthony’s Hospital. 

Sisters of St. Agnes. 

General. 

1909 

Yes. 

Yes. 

20 

5 


5 

2 


3 

Iola: 













St. John’s Hospital. 

Sisters of St. Joseph. 

0 ) . 

1905 

(») 

0) 

( l ) 

0) 

0) 

C 1 ) 

(») 

(‘) 

(>) 

Kansas City: 




Bethany Hospital. 

Methodist Episcopal Church 

General, except chronic, con- 

1892 

Yes. 

Yes 

50 

0) 

29 

0) 

25 


25 

Orchard St. and Tenney Ave. 

tagious, and infectious. 









Douglass Hospital. 

African M.E.Church. 

General.. 

1898 

Yes. 

( 5 ) 

20 

14 

6 

8 

6 


6 

312 Washington Ave. 












St. Margaret’s Hospital. 

Sisters of the Poor of St. 

General, except contagious.. 

1884 

No. 

Yes. 

350 

58 

40 

18 

42 

10 

32 

Eight St. and Vermont Ave. 

Francis. 












(Armour Sta.). 













Leavenworth: 













Cushing Hospital 6 . 

Kansas Association for 

General. 

1868 

Yes. 

Yes. 

25 

9 


9 

8 


8 

637 Marshall St. 

Friendless Women. 












St. John’s Hospital 7 . 

Sisters of Charity. 

General, except contagious.. 

1859 

Yes. 

Yes. 

70 

7 


7 

(') 

0) 

(') 

Kiowa and* Seventh Sts. 










1 Not reported. 2 Equipment. 3 Instruction for Hospital Corps. 4 Enlisted men, Hospital Corps. 














































































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


285 


SANITARIUMS: 1910—Continued. 


PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING YEAR. 

PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 


RECEIPTS DURING 

YEAR. 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Total. 

Male. 

* 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Adults 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

Total. 

Appro¬ 

pria¬ 

tions. 

Derived 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

from— 

Care of 
patients. 

Other 

sources. 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

12 

7 

5 






$ 1,650 

$ 1,650 




$ 1,650 

$ 1,600 

$50 

$ 14,000 

$ 8,000 

$ 6,000 

38 

244 

92 

152 

9 

( l ) 

0 ) 

0 ) 

(■) 

8,366 

$800 

$ 7,566 


(i) 

7,666 

(>) 

( l ) 

60,000 

( i ) 

39 

( l ) 

0 ) 

0 ) 

30 

8 

22 

30 

23,497 



14,435 

$ 9,062 

19,893 

19,893 

90,000 

90,000 

40 

298 

146 

152 

90 

39 

51 

90 


72,898 

71,112 


1,786 

80,797 

43,812 

36,985 

155,858 

155,858 


41 

45 

(1) 

(!) 

(!) 

( l ) 

( l ) 

3 

0 ) 

0 ) 



( l ) 


0) 

0 ) 

p ) 

P ) 

( l ) 

0 ) 

42 

764 

322 

442 

20 

11 

9 

19 

1 

15,806 

840 

1,137 

13,829 


16,657 

15,147 

1,510 

40,000 

40,000 

43 

28 

0 ) 

0 ) 

P ) 

(!) 

0 ) 

0 ) 

0 ) 

0 ) 

c ) 



(!) 

( l ) 

(*) 

P ) 

0 ) 


44 

460 

182 

278 

22 

9 

13 

18 

4 

19,682 

2,738 

16,944 


21,822 

16,822 

5,000 

24,000 

( l ) 

( i ) 

45 

321 

145 

176 

7 

6 

1 

7 


13,600 


600 

13,000 


13,150 

12,800 

350 

36,000 

36,000 

46 

1,457 

(■) 

0 ) 

72 

0 ) 

( i ) 

(*) 

(*> 

(») 

( i ) 

c > 

(>) 

c ) 

o ) 

(>) 

<») 

( i ) 

(*) 

0 ) 

47 

552 

301 

251 

30 

17 

13 

25 

5 

13,374 



13,374 


12,774 

12,774 


58,000 

58,000 


48 

1,139 

445 

694 

41 

18 

23 

38 

3 

36,391 

798 

1,143 

33,806 

644 

35,288 

30,972 

4,316 

48,700 

48,700 


49 

758 

0 ) 

( 1 ) 

33 

0) 

0 ) 

01 

0 ) 

21,009 



21,009 


22,673 

22,071 

602 

P ) 

P ) 


50 

180 

50 

130 

18 

5 

13 

13 

5 

5,000 



5,000 


5,000 

5,000 


28,000 

28,000 


51 

215 

73 

142 

7 

3 

4 

7 


5,577 



5,577 


5,677 

5,677 


35,000 

35,000 


52 

389 

96 

293 

14 

5 

9 

14 


4,200 

500 


3,700 


3,500 

3,000 

500 

13,200 

12,000 

1,200 

1 

96 

36 

60 

6 

1 

5 

6 


5,285 

500 


4,785 


5,299 

5,299 


2 1,000 

21,000 


2 

199 

189 

10 

6 

6 


6 


3,475 



3,47 


p ) 

3,313 

P ) 

2 1,000 

21,000 


3 

293 

163 

130 

23 



01 

o 

8,600 

500 

800 

7,300 


7,600 

5,300 

2,300 

40,000 

40,000 


4 

107 

(l) 

(l) 

5 

v ) 

3 

v / 

2 

5 

3,963 



3,963 


3,854 

3,803 

51 

11,000 

10,000 

1,000 

5 

378 

146 

232 

o 

0) 

o 

0 ) 

29 

(■) 

(>) 

c ) 

o 

(■) 

( i ) 

c 1 ) 

o 

(>) 

(U 

( i ) 

6 

1,152 

1 152 


19 

19 


19 


0 ) 

( l ) 


0 ) 


(!) 

(!) 

P ) 

P ) 

0 ) 


7 

1 032 

1 032 


24 

24 


24 


0 ) 

(!) 


(!) 


0) 

0 ) 

P ) 

P ) 

0 ) 


8 

1 141 

1 141 


32 

32 


32 


0 ) 

( 1 ) 


0 ) 


(!) 

0 ) 

0 ) 

P ) 

( 1 ) 


9 

251 

98 

153 

12 

6 

6 

12 


8,740 

526 

242 

3,482 

4 , 490 

8 , 740 

7,186 

1,554 

(»> 

25,000 

o 

10 

94 

29 

65 

17 

9 

8 

15 

2 

4,556 

500 

484 

2,985 

587 

4 , 463 

3,914 

549 

23,000 

23,000 


11 


1Q3 

1R9 

Q 

4 

4 

3 


9 148 

663 

185 

7,300 

1,000 

8,825 

6,950 

1,875 

25,000 

25,000 


12 

131 

X I/O 

m 

4 


4 

4 


0 ) 

100 


(!) 

200 

6 , 700 

6 , 700 


13,400 

10,000 

3,400 

13 

159 

^ / 

68 

\ j 

91 

12 

5 

7 

11 

1 

10,730 

99 

5,140 

4,921 

570 

11,122 

4,970 

6,152 

15,000 

15,000 


14 

o 

(>) 

(>) 

(*) 

0 ) 

0 ) 

0 ) 

(*) 

(>) 

0 ) 

( i ) 

o 

c ) 

(0 

(>) 

0) 

0 ) 

0 ) 

0 ) 

15 

765 

351 

414 

23 

9 

14 

21 

2 

60,224 

640 

41,373 

16,915 

1,296 

49,011 

24,941 

24,070 

30,000 

30,000 


16 

153 

62 

91 

9 

5 

4 

9 

—... 

1,757 

480 

454 

797 

26 

1,709 

1,709 


11,000 

11,000 


17 

3,356 

2,458 

898 

296 

164 

132 

271 

25 

3,240 

740 

700 

1,800 


110,000 

0 ) 

(0 

800,000 

800,000 


18 

993 

n\ 

m 

93 


28 

25 

3 

8,781 

300 



8,481 

8,781 

7,781 

1,000 

(!) 

15,000 

0) 

19 

204 

v ) 

100 

v / 

104 

10 

3 

7 

10 


673 

673 



( i ) 

(■) 

0) 

15,000 

15,000 


20 


6 Colored only, 8 Women and children. 1 No patients admitted after May 1, 1910; institution undergoing repairs. 





































































































































































Institution number. 


286 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table IV.— HOSPITALS AND 


NAME AND LOCATION. 



t 

o 

s-. 


Supervised or conducted by— 


Class of cases treated. 



KANSAS—Continued. 


MEDICAL STAFF 
AT CLOSE OF 
YEAR. 


NURSES AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 



o 



21 


22 

23 

24 

25 

26 

27 

28 

29 

30 

31 

32 

33 

34 


35 


Newton: 

Bethel Deaconess Home and Hos¬ 
pital. 

Second and Pine Sts. 

Ottawa: 

Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe 
Hospital. 1 
Pittsburg: 

Mount Carmel Hospital. 

Michigan Ave. and Thirty- 
second St. 

Pittsburg City Hospital. 

Eighth and Olive Sts. 
Rosedale: 

Bell Memorial Hospital. 

College Ave. and Broad St. 

S alin a: 

St. Barnabas Hospital * . 

Topeka: 

Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe 
Hospital, i 
417 East Sixth St. 

Christ’s Hospital.. 

Tenth and West Sts. 

City Detention Hospital. 

Jane C. Stormont Hospital. 

322 Greenwood Ave. 

St. Francis’ Hospital.. 

Sixth Ave. and Garfield St. 
Wellington: 

St. Luke’s Hospital 6 .. 

Avenue A and Nineteenth St. 
Wichita: 

St. Francis’ Hospital. 

957 St. Francis Ave. 

Wichita Hospital. 

West Douglas Ave. and Seneca 
St. 

Winfield: 

St. Mary’s Hospital. 

1500 East Ninth Ave. 


Bethel Deaconess Home and 
Hospital Society. 


Atchison, Topeka & Santa 
Fe Hospital Association. 

Sisters of St. Joseph.. 


Private corporation 


University of Kansas 


Private organization. 

Atchison, Topeka & Santa 
Fe Hospital Association. 

Protestant Episcopal Church 

City of Topeka. 

Private corporation. 

Sisters of Charity. 


Protestant Episcopal Church 


Sisters of the Sorrowful 
Mother. 

Private corporation. 


Sisters of St. Joseph 


KENTUCKY. 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 


Ashland: 

King’s Daughters’ Hospital. 

Winchester Ave. 

Bowling Green: 

St. Joseph’s Hospital. 

633 Twelfth St. 

Covington: 

St. Elizabeth’s Hospital. 

Eleventh St. 

Dayton: 

Speers Memorial Hospital. 

Main St. 

Frankfort: 

King’s Daughters’ Hospital. 

220 Main St. 

Henderson: 

City Hospital and Sanitarium. 

Green St. 

Lexington: 

St. Joseph’s Hospital. 

554 West Second St. 

Louisville: 

Children’s Free Hospital. 

226 East Chestnut St. 

German Methodist Deaconess 
Home and Hospital. 

529 South Eighth St. 

Hazelwood Sanatorium. 

Station E. 

Hospital of SS. Mary and Eliza¬ 
beth. 

Twelfth St. and Magnolia Ave. 

Jewish Hospital. 

Floyd and Kentucky Sts. 

Louisville City Hospital. 

Norton Infirmary. 

Third and Oak Sts. 

Red Cross Sanatorium. 

1436 South Shelby St. 

St. Anthony’s Hospital. 

1315 Wickliffe Ave. 

St. John’s Eruptive Hospital.. 

Mauslick Road. 

St. Joseph’s Infirmary.. 

637 Fourth Ave. 

U. S. Marine Hospital.. 

High St. 

Waverly Hill Sanatorium.. 

Valley Station P. O. 


King’s Daughters 


Private corporation. 

Sisters of the Poor of St. 
Francis. 

Trustees of Speers Endow¬ 
ment Fund. 

King’s Daughters. 

City of Henderson. 


Sisters of Charity of Nazareth 


Private corporation. 

Methodist Episcopal Church 


Louisville Anti-Tuberculosis 
Association. 

Sisters of Charity of Nazareth 


Federation of Jewish Chari¬ 
ties. 

City of Louisville. 

Private corporation (Episco¬ 
pal). 

Red Cross Association. 

Sisters of St. Francis. 

City of Louisville. 

Sisters of Charity of Nazareth 

U. S. Government. 

Louisville Anti-Tuberculosis 
Association. 


General, except insane and 
incurable. 


General 


General, except contagious 
and insane. 

General, except insane. 


General 


General 

General 


General. 

Contagious. 

General, except contagious.. 

General, except contagious.. 
General. 


General, except contagious 
and obstetrical. 

General, except contagious.. 


General, except contagious 
and mental. 


General, except contagious 
and incurable. 

General. 

General, except contagious.. 
General, except contagious.. 


General 


General, except contagious.. 


General 


General. 

General, except contagious.. 


Tubercular. 

General, except contagious.. 


General, except contagious 
and infectious. 

General, except smallpox_ 

General. 

General, except cancerous, 
contagious, and tubercular. 
General, except contagious 
and tubercular. 

Smallpox. 

Surgical. 

General. 

Tubercular. 


1908 

Yes. 

1891 

No. 

1903 

Yes. 

1894 

Yes. 

1906 

Yes. 

1910 

Yes. 

1891 

No. 

1882 

Yes. 

1900 

1905 

No. 

Yes. 

1909 

Yes. 

1911 

Yes. 

1889 

No. 

1885 

Yes. 

1903 

No. 

1898 

No. 

1909 

Yes. 

1860 

No. 

1897 

Yes. 

1896 

No. 

1894 

Yes. 

1874 

No. 

1890 

Yes. 

1895 

Yes. 

1907 

No. 

1874 

Yes. 

1903 

Yes. 

1817 

1881 

Yes. 

Yes. 

1899 

Yes. 

1901 

Yes. 

1845 

No. 

1839 

No. 

1847 

No. 

1907 

Yes. 


Yes. 


Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 


No. 


No. 


Yes. 


Yes. 

No. 

Yes. 

( 2 ) 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

Yes. 

No. 

( 8 ) 

No. 

Yes. 

No. 

Yes. 

No. 


24 

35 

34 

20 

49 

30 

100 

85 

5 

40 

100 


22 

2 

9 

7 

11 

26 

11 

42 

1 

12 

11 


22 

1 

9 

2 

8 

26 

6 

40 

1 

12 

11 


14 

3 

18 

5 

14 

6 
10 

35 

2 

16 

25 


14 

1 

9 

5 
14 

6 
7 

35 

1 

16 

25 


120 

75 

25 

10 

24 
200 
100 

20 

25 

210 

51 

33 

40 

75 

60 

300 

100 

15 

150 

100 

150 

40 

100 


16 

3 


14 

2 


22 

20 


22 

20 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


25 

11 

22 

12 

35 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


61 

10 

1 

36 

13 

60 

25 

6 

1 


( 2 ) 

24 

10 

20 

12 

35 

( 2 ) 

61 

10 


3 

9 

39 

23 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


35 


13 

53 

25 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


15 

44 

36 

5 

21 

2 

37 

3 

4 


3 

9 

31 

23 

3 

7 

( 2 ) 

6 

17 

( 2 ) 

15 

36 

36 

5 

20 

1 

35 


1 Employees. 

2 Not reported. 

3 Included in report of Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Hospital, Topeka, Kans. 
< Opened October 26, 1910; statistics for about two months. 




































































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


287 


SANITARIUMS: 1910—Continued. 


PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING YEAR. 

PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE 

OF YEAR. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Adults 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

244 

102 

142 

18 

10 

8 

17 

1 

460 

460 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

461 

256 

205 

15 

9 

6 

15 


410 

155 

255 

14 

9 

5 

14 


380 

190 

190 

12 

7 

5 

12 


20 

10 

10 

2 

1 

1 

2 


1,030 

1,030 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

750 

315 

435 

45 

17 

28 

39 

6 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

5 

3 

2 

5 


429 

215 

214 

27 

11 

16 

25 

2 

800 

365 

435 

45 

20 

25 

40 

5 

1,409 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

90 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

32 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

32 


400 

134 

266 

18 

7 

11 

16 

2 

92 

57 

35 

( 2 ) 

(*) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

4 

304 

61 

243 

13 

4 

9 

11 

2 

1,170 

821 

349 

154 

71 

83 

109 

45 

564 

211 

353 

55 

28 

27 

51 

4 

106 

56 

50 

8 

3 

5 

8 


180 

100 

80 

16 

9 

7 

16 


1,890 

993 

897 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

261 

131 

130 

26 

13 

13 


26 

589 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

29 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

59 

31 

28 

22 

12 

10 

22 


589 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

70 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

756 

280 

476 

24 

12 

12 

21 

3 

3,426 

2,128 

1,298 

210 

128 

82 

200 

10 

995 

350 

645 

28 

8 

20 

28 


70 

26 

44 

7 

4 

3 

7 


1,088 

330 

758 

108 

40 

68 

102 

6 

10 


3 






1,140 

457 

683 

35 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

9 231 

231 


16 

16 


16 


95 

60 

35 

48 

24 

24 

34 

14 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

| Institution number. 1* 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

$6,629 

$6,345 

$284 

$28,610 

$28,610 


21 

( 8 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

22 

13,327 

12,079 

1,248 

50,000 

50,000 


23 

4,507 

4,507 


11,000 

11,000 


24 

66,612 

14,530 

52,082 

79,500 

79,500 


25 

1 339 

1,339 


29,000 

29,000 


26 

9 174,172 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

9 368,103 

201,276 

$166,827 

27 

45,263 

43,285 

1,978 

• 169,129 

142,578 

26,551 

28 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


2,000 

2,000 


29 

13,000 

13,000 


107,000 

95,000 

12,000 

30 

8,750 

8,000 

750 

100,000 

100,000 


31 







32 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

33 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

50,000 

50,000 


34 

7,764 

7,200 

564 

16,500 

16,500 


35 

2,500 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

6,000 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

1 

6,836 

4,436 

2,400 

18,000 

18,000 


2 

16,334 

14,834 

1,500 

50,000 

50,000 


3 

19,399 

18,292 

1,107 

167,709 

153,509 

14,200 

4 

12,688 

4,150 

8,538 

18,000 

18,000 


5 

5,500 

5,200 

300 

12,000 

12,000 


6 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

7 

22,717 

7,744 

14,973 

133,000 

63,000 

70,000 

8 

18,320 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

50,000 

50,000 


9 

30,958 

26,869 

4,089 

40,000 

40,000 


10 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

11 

23,841 

23,841 


60,000 

60,000 


12 

7 84,000 

84,000 


7 300,000 

300,000 


13 

( 2 ) 

37,720 

( 2 ) 

204^ 000 

200,000 

4,000 

14 

884 

837 

47 

3,500 

3,500 


15 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

16 

7,000 

7,000 


18,000 

18,000 


17 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

18 

15,945 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


19 

72,000 

18,000 

54,000 

140,000 

140,000 

. 

20 


RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 


Total. 


$7,829 

( 8 9 ) 

13,383 

4,686 

68,026 

22,332 

234,397 

45,917 

( 2 ) 

15,422 

10,200 


Derived from- 


Appro- 

pna- 

tions. 


$71 


500 

500 

60,632 


( 2 ) 


200 


Dona¬ 

tions. 


$1,681 

( 8 ) 

97 


21,928 
234,397 

299 


Care of 
patients. 


$5,507 


9,890 

4,186 

7,394 

404 


43,821 


13,022 

10,000 


Other 

sources. 


$570 


2,896 


1,797 
*2,’ 400 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

7,764 

2,782 

6,836 

16,377 

19,679 

4,119 

5,500 

( 2 ) 

23,495 
18,922 

23,648 

( 2 ) 

19,126 

7 85,000 
42,609 

937 

( 2 ) 

6,000 

( 2 ) 

15,945 
48,500 


( 2 ) 


500 

) 

500 

600 

386 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


1,200 
2,500 
( 2 ) 


120 
50 
8,146 
269 
209 


5,317 


85,000 


( 2 ) 

18,680 

1,741 

4,646 

( 2 ) 

2,000 

' i99 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

6,250 

1,450 
6,400 
4,672 
18,443 
1,930 
3,000 
( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

1,009 

612 


3,559 

96' 


16,979 

13,436 

( 2 ) 

15,721 


( 2 ) 

4,f 

202 

249 

( 2 ) 

1,405 


( 2 ) 


38,636 
937 

( 2 ) 


3,774 

( 2 ) 


6,000 


( 2 ) 


15,945 

48,500 


6 Includes report of hospitals maintained by the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Hospital Association at Fort Madison, Iowa; La Junta, Colo.; Las Vegas, N. Mex., and 
Ottawa, Kans. 

6 Not opened until 1911. 

7 Includes report of dispensary, 

s Colored only. 

9 Exclusive of out-patients. 














































































































































288 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 


Table IV.— HOSPITALS AND 


1m 





U 

3, 

1 

© 

u 


MEDICAL STAFF 
AT CLOSE OF 

NURSES AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 

JK 

g 





*3 

CO 


YEAR. 









o 









g 

c 

NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of cases treated. 

”3 

© 

73 

■S SB 
« 2 

•2-d 

■s ® 

Q..S 

'V 

© 

,3 







o 

S3 

CO 




3 

3 

s 

© 

1 

03 

© 

o 

9 

S-. 

O 

O 

t-t 

© 

a 

3 

*c3 

-*G> 

o 

3 

© 

8 

b b 

.a 

3 

*3 

O 


© 

a 

© 






e 

O 


H 

PS 

> 

£H 

a 



KENTUCKY—Continued. 














Owensboro: 













21 

City Hospital. 

City of Owensboro. 

General, except contagious.. 

1898 

Yes. 

Yes. 

28 

14 

12 

2 

8 


8 

' Tenth and Center Sts. 






Paducah: 













22 

Illinois Central Railroad Hospital 1 
Fifteenth St. and Broadway. 

Illinois Central Railroad 

General. 

1884 

No. 

Yes. 

120 

5 

5 


4 

4 


Co. 








23 

Riverside Hospital. 

City of Paducah. 

General. 

1905 

Yes. 

Yes. 

SO 

15 

6 

9 

12 


12 

Fourth and Clay Sts. 






Richmond: 













24 

Pattie A. Clay Infirmary. 

Private organization. 

General. 

1893 

No. 

Yes. 

14 

3 

3 


3 


3 

323 Glyndon Ave. 










Shelb Yvn.LE: 













25 

King’s Daughters’ Hospital.. 

King’s Daughters. 

General. 

1903 

No. 

Yes. 

12 

21 

9 

12 

2 


2 

922 Clay. 







LOUISIANA. 

• 













Bonfouca: 













1 

Camp Hygeia 3 . 

Louisiana Anti-Tuberculo- 

Tubercular. 

1908 

No. 

No. 

24 

1 


1 

1 


1 

New Orleans: 

sis League. 













2 

Bethany Home Sanitarium. 

German Protestant Betha- 

General, except contagious.. 

1905 

Yes. 

No. 

30 

15 

1 

14 

10 

1 

9 


1643 North Claiborne Aye. 

ny Society. 


3 

Charity Hospital of Louisiana. 

State of Louisiana. 

General, except smallpox ... 

1786 

Yes. 

( 2 ) 

1,050 

4 29 

29 


104 


104 


Tiilane Ave. 




4 

Eye, Ear, Nose, and Throat Hos¬ 
pital. 

Private corporation. 

Eye, ear, nose, and throat... 

1889 

No. 

Yes. 

30 

17 

4 

13 

8 


8 






165 Elk Place. 













5 

Hotel Dieu. 

Sisters of Charity. 

General. 

1859 

Yes. 

No. 

60 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

26 


26 


Tulane Aye. 




6 

St. Joseph’s Maternity Hospital... 
1507 Magazine St. 

Sisters of Charity.... 

Maternity. 

1860 

No. 

No. 

10 

1 


1 

1 


1 







7 

Sarah Goodridge Hospital . 

Freedmen’s Aid Society of 
the M. E. Church. 

General. 

1896 

Yes. 

( 6 ) 

16 

( 2 ) 

1 

( 2 ) 

9 


9 


1566 Canal St. 



8 

Touro Infirmary. 

Hebrew Benevolent Associa- 

General, except contagious.. 

1854 

Yes. 

No. 

180 

138 

12 

26 

7 66 

6 

60 

3516 Prytahia St. 

tion. 

9 

U. S. Army Post Hospital (Jackson 
Barracks). 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

( 2 ) 

( 8 ) 

Yes. 

18 

1 

1 


2 

9 2 










North Peters Aye. 













10 

U. S. Marine Hospital.. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1884 

No. 

Yes. 

70 

4 

4 


3 

3 


Henry Clay Aye. and Tchou- 










pitoulas St. 













11 

Presbyterian Hospital of New 
Orleans. 11 

Presbyterian Church_ 

General. 

1910 

Yes. 

No. 

75 

3 

3 


36 


36 








719 Carondelet St. 














Shreveport: 

/ 












12 

Shreveport Charity Hospital. 

State of Louisiana. 

General. 

1876 

Yes. 

Yes. 

200 

15 

3 

12 

20 


20 

1240 Texas Ave. 






MAINE. 














Augusta: 













1 

Augusta General Hospital 

Private corporation.. 

General.J.. 

1898 

Yes. 

Yes. 

58 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

12 

20 

1 

19 

Arsenal and East Chestnut Sts. 




Bangor: 













2 

Eastern Maine General Hospital.. 
State St. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1892 

Yes. 

Yes. 

120 

22 

2 

20 

32 

2 

30 







Belfast: 













3 

Waldo County General Hospital.. 
151 High St. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1901 

Yes. 

Yes. 

22 

11 


11 

5 


5 








Biddeford: 













4 

Trull Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1900 

Yes. 

Yes. 

35 

6 

1 

5 

22 


22 


15 May St. 






5 

Webber Hospital. 

Private organization. 

General, except contagious.. 

( 2 ) 

Yes. 

Yes. 

20 

( s ) 

8 

( 2 ) 

8 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


143 Pool St. 



Cape Cottage: 













6 

U. S Army Post Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1898 

( 8 ) 

Yes. 

30 

2 

2 


10 

9 10 


Fort Williams. 








Eagle Lake: 













7 

Northern Maine General Hospital. 

Little Franciscan Sisters of 

General. 

1905 

No. 

Yes. 

30 

2 

i 

1 

10 

1 

9 


Mary. 





Eden: 













8 

Bar Harbor Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1899 

No. 

Yes. 

30 

15 


15 

4 

1 

3 

Bar Harbor P. O. 







Hebron: 













9 

Maine State Sanatorium. 

Private corporation. 

Tubercular. 

1904 

Yes. 

No. 

100 

13 

3 

10 

12 


12 

Greenwood Mountain. 






Lewiston: 













10 

Central Maine General Hospital_ 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1891 

Yes. 

Yes. 

75 

18 

2 

16 

12 

35 

21 

2 

33 

17 

11 

St. Mary’s General Hospital. 

Sisters of* Charity (Gray 
Nuns). 

General. 

1888 

Yes. 

Yes. 

125 

14 

2 

4 

318 Sabattus St. 





Portland: 












12 

Children’s Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

Orthopedic. 

1908 

Yes. 

Yes. 

65 

10 


10 

20 


20 

91 Danforth St. 





13 

Isolation Hospital. 

City of Portland. 

Contagious. 

1885 

No. 

Yes. 

10 

2 


2 

2 


2 

555 Brighton Ave. 









14 

Maine E ye and Ear Infirmary. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1886 

Yes. 

Yes. 

75 

21 

3 

18 

21 

i 

20 

79 Bramhall St. 




15 

Maine General Hospital.... 

Private corporation. . . 

General, except alcoholic, 
insane, and venereal. 

1872 

Yes. 

Yes. 

160 

22 

5 

17 

59 

3 

56 

22 Arsenal St. 




16 

U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

( 2 ) 

( 8 ) 

Yes. 

32 

2 

2 


3 

0 3 


Fort McKinley. 








17 

U. S. Marine Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1859 

No. 

Yes. 

40 

3 

2 

1 

2 

2 


Veranda St. 





1 




> Employees. < Includes 26 students. 

2 Not reported. 5 Included in report of St. Vincent’s Infant Asylum. 

3 Reopened July 23, 1910; statistics for about four months. 6 Colored only. 




























































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


289 


SANITARIUMS: 1910—Continued. 


PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING YEAR. 

PATIENT 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

181 

101 

80 

9 

699 

691 

8 

10 

608 

320 

288 

23 

80 

26 

54 

2 

100 

49 

51 

9 

35 

17 

18 

18 

600 

200 

400 

16 

11,313 

7,214 

4,099 

870 

148 

82 

66 

12 

1,141 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

50 

18 


18 

6 

173 

72 

101 

7 

3,023 

1,644 

1,379 

129 

235 

235 


4 

io 449 

449 


44 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

32 

4,140 

2,812 

1,328 

184 

623 

258 

365 

29 

1,447 

706 

741 

75 

160 

69 

91 

10 

302 

98 

204 

( 2 ) 

300 

10C 

200 

19 

321 

321 


5 

163 

98 

65 

12 

232 

74 

158 

6 

230 

95 

138 

82 

1,230 

581 

649 

61 

1,206 

596 

610 

58 

183 

9/ 

86 

56 

28 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

1 

1,056 

572 

484 

27 

1,758 

927 

831 

94 

412 

412 


5 

10 286 

286 


25 


OF YEAR. 


Male. 


10 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


73 

4 

44 

10 

125 

12 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


Fe¬ 

male. 


( 2 ) 


Adults 


9 

10 


( 2 ) 


12 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


6 

4 

56 


22 


59 


17 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


10 


34 


28 

24 


27 


16 

57 

5 

25 


2 

5 

48 


33 

34 


29 

1 

11 

37 


Chil¬ 

dren. 


( 2 ) 


13 

16 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


115 

4 

44 

32 

173 

27 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 


Total. 


Derived from- 


Appro- 

pna- 

tions. 


14 


11 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


9 

22 

5 

12 

5 

82 


61 

55 


17 

1 

22 

82 

5 

75 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


3 

39 


5 

12 


$ 8,000 

34,217 

20,420 

3,264 

3,536 


6,000 

8,840 

202,958 

23,413 

43,133 

1,460 

( 2 ) 
i 144,192 

( 2 ) 

29,282 
( 2 ) 

40,000 

17,612 

41,520 

8,272 

10,000 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

5,347 
23,293 
55,623 


39,264 
28,396 


12,256 

( 2 ) 
27,043 
72,820 

( 2 ) 
22,585 


$3,000 


10,000 

1,150 

1,240 


145,000 

7,958 


7,583 
( 2 ) 

29,282 
( 2 ) 

40,000 

3,500 

5,000 


1,500 


1,000 
( 2 ) 
1,000 
2,000 
7,500 


3,250 

5,712 


5,000 

( 2 ) 
5,000 
10,000 

( 2 ) 
22,585 


Dona¬ 

tions. 


i Includes report of dispensary, 
s Instruction for Hospital Corps, 
s Enlisted men, Hospital Corps. 


$33,676 

1,500 

85 

156 

6,000 

1,080 

942 

953 

192 


Care of 
patients. 


( 2 ) 
24,000 


( 2 ) 


436 

398 

2,798 

1,000 

( 2 ) 


14,263 


257 

414 


2,367 


2,324 


$5,000 

541 

8,920 

1,634 

1,964 


7,760 


41,515 
1,460 
2,252 
93,500 
( 2 ) 


Other 

sources. 


( 2 ) 


12,858 

27,942 

3,970 

9,000 
( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

3,921 

3,210 

33,016 


30,628 
20,984 


4,573 

( 2 ) 

15,225 
45,586 
( 2 ) 


$395 

176 


57,016 

14,502 

1,426 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 


Total. 


For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 


19,109 


( 2 ) 


818 

8,180 

4 


( 2 ) 


426 
3,820 
15,107 


5,129 

1,286 


316 


6,818 
14,910 


$24,000 

35,235 

11,800 

3,003 

3,536 


3,600 

8,917 
204,708 
18,433 

34,827 

1,106 

( 2 ) 

* 130,180 
( 2 ) 

29,282 
( 2 ) 

40,000 

17,612 

( 2 ) 

9,951 

11,000 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

4,593 

23,899 

72,614 


39,784 

30,352 


62,669 
( 2 ) 

29,470 
74,872 

( 2 ) 
22,585 


$ 8,000 

33,072 

11,000 

3,003 

3,441 


3,600 

( 2 ) 
184,708 
17,349 

30.528 
930 

5,000 
130,180 
( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

40,000 

17,612 

38,156 

8,234 

10,500 
( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

4,593 

9,196 

56.529 


35,898 

27,330 


19,269 
( 2 ) 

29,470 
72,584 
( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 


$16,000 

2,163 

800 


95 


( 2 ) 
20,000 
1,084 

4,299 

176 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 


Total. 


( 2 ) 
1,717 
500 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


14,703 

16,085 


3,886 

3,022 


43,400 
( 2 ) 


2,288 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


$32,000 

75,000 

25,000 

8,000 

8,000 


7,000 

18,000 

1,630,860 

153,524 

( 2 ) 

( 5 ) 
34,000 
i 457,558 
( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

250,000 

40,000 

250,000 

6,000 

25,000 
( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

15,500 

79,973 

404,066 


( 2 ) 
130,000 


120,084 

( 2 ) 
279,372 
327,552 

( 2 ) 
250,000 


Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 


$32,000 

75,000 

25,000 

8,000 

8,000 


In¬ 

vested 

funds. 


7,000 

18,000 
1,593,933 
150,000 

( 2 ) 

( 6 ) 
9,000 
457,558 
( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

250,000 

35,000 

( 2 ) 

6,000 

25,000 
( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

15,500 

44,093 

203,066 


$36,927 

3,524 

( 2 ) 
25,000 


( 2 ) 


21 

22 

23 

24 

25 


150,000 

130,000 


114,834 
( 2 ) 
153,320 
400 

( 2 ) 
250,000 


5,000 
( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


35,880 
201,000 
( 2 ) 


5,250 


126,052 
327,152 


2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 

1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 


10 

11 


12 

13 

14 

15 

16 
17 


m Exclusive of out-patients. 

u Opened October 1,1910; statistics for three months. 


44153°—14-19 







































































































































































































290 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table IV.— HOSPITALS AND 







a 

S 

(H 


MEDICAL STAFF 
AT CLOSE OF 

NURSES AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 

9 








YEAH. 




,0 





o 


. 






a 

S3 

G 

NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of cases treated. 

*d 

9 

'd 

o . 
•§8 

TS'd 

■g ? 

'V 

9 

& 

S-H 







.2 

+-> 

S3 

M 




3 

<2 

1-4 

c3 

9 

b£ H 

.3 

.3 

2 

9 

O 

•d 

9 

(-4 

£ 

Ut 

9 

& 

a 

3 

TS 

o 

g 

'd 

8 

bio 

.3 

■P 

3 

la 

-*p 

o 

9 

9 

Is 

a 

9 

a 




£ 

Eh 

o 

z 

EH 

« 

> 

Eh 

a 

Pm 


MAIN E—Continued. 














Rockland: 







8 






18 

Knox County General Hospital... 
2 Maple St. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1902 

Yes. 

Yes. 

23 

3 

5 

5 


5 










Rumford: 












3 

19 

Oxford County Emergency Hos¬ 
pital. 

Private organization. 

General. 

1903 

No. 

No. 

10 

6 

2 

4 

3 











27 Lochness Road. 














St. Agatha: 













20 

The Hospital. 

Daughters of Wisdom. 

General. 

1905 

No. 

Yes. 

18 

2 

1 

1 

3 


3 

York: 









21 

York Hospital... 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1905 

No. 

Yes. 

16 

7 


7 

1 


1 

York Village. 










MARYLAND. 














Annapolis: 













1 

Emergency Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1902 

Yes. 

Yes. 

12 

0) 

( l ) 

( l * ) 

3 


3 


Cathedral and Franklin Sts. 






2 

U. S. Naval Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1905 

No. 

Yes. 

125 

4 

4 


21 

12 

9 


Baltimore: 









3 

Baltimore Eye, Ear, and Throat 
Charity Hospital. 

625 West Franklin St. 


Eye, ear, nose, and throat... 

1882 

No. 

Yes. 

37 

2 23 

2 

21 

2 11 


11 





4 

Church Home and Infirmary. 

Private corporation (Episco¬ 
pal). 

General. 

1854 

Yes. 

No. 

160 

53 

1 

52 

44 


44 


100 North Broadway. 






5 

Franklin Square Hospital. 

Private corporation. 


1898 

Yes. 

Yes. 

80 

24 

4 

20 

15 


15 


Calhoun and Fayette Sts. 






6 

Hebrew Hospital and Asylum 
(Hospital Department). 

Hebrew Federated Charities. 


1867 

Yes. 

Yes. 

90 

29 

7 

22 

40 


40 







Rutland and East Monument 














Sts. 













7 

Hospital for Crippled and De¬ 
formed Children. 

Private corporation. 

Crippled and deformed. 

1895 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

8 

2 

6 

12 


12 








2000 North Charles St. 













8 

Hospital for the Women of Mary¬ 
land. 

Private corporation. 

General . 

1882 

No. 

No. 

60 

24 

4 

20 

27 


27 





9 

John St. and Lafayette Ave. 
Johns Hopkins Hospital . 

Trustees of the Johns Hop¬ 
kins Hospital Endowment. 

General, except incurable. .. 

1867 

Yes. 

Yes. 

360 

56 

34 

22 

192 


192 

501 North Broadway. 


10 

Maryland General Hospital.. 

Methodist Hospital Associa¬ 
tion. 4 

General, except contagious.. 

1885 

Yes. 

Yes. 

150 

44 

8 

36 

35 


35 

Linden Ave. and Madison St. 


11 

Maryland Homeopathic Hospital 
and Free Dispensary. 

1122 North Mount St. 

Private corporation. 

General . 

1S90 

Yes. 

Yes. 

65 

19 

3 

16 

18 


18 





12 

Mercy Hospital . 

Sisters of Mercy . 


1875 

Yes. 

Yes. 

300 

2 63 

13 

50 

2 55 


55 

Calvert and Saratoga Sts. 




13 

Municipal Tuberculosis Hospital .. 
Eastern Ave., extended. 

City of Baltimore. 

Tubercular. 

1904 

No. 

Yes. 

163 

4 

3 

1 

16 

4 

12 







14 

Nursery and Child’s Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, and remediable de- 

1878 

(») 

(») 

(•) 

6 

1 

5 

0) 

(') 

0) 

Franklin and Schroeder Sts. 


formity. 




15 

Presbyterian Eye, Ear, and Throat 
Charity Hospital. 

Presbyterian churches. 

Eye, ear, nose, and throat... 

1877 

No. 

Yes. 

65 

16 

1 

15 

6 


6 





1007 East Baltimore St. 













16 

Provident Hospital and Free Dis¬ 
pensary. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1S94 

Yes. 

Yes. 

25 

14 

1 

13 

7 


7 








413 West Biddle St. 













17 

Robert Garrett Hospital for Chil¬ 
dren. 

Private individual. 

General. 

1886 

Yes. 

No. 

33 

4 

1 

3 

10 


10 







27 North Carey St. 













18 

St. Agnes Hospital. 

Sisters of Charity. 

General. 

1863 

Yes. 

Yes. 

250 

17 

4 

13 

38 

7 

31 

Wilkins AVe. 





19 

St. Joseph’s German Hospital. 

Sisters of Third Order of St. 

General, except contagious 

1864 

Yes. 

Yes. 

250 

25 

7 

18 

50 

10 

40 


Caroline and Oliver Sts. 

Francis. 

and insane. 











20 

St. Luke’s Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1905 

Yes. 

Yes. 

45 

2 43 

1 

42 

2 13 


13 

114 West North Ave. 



21 

St. Vincent’s Maternity Hospital.. 
Division St. and Lafayette Ave. 

Sisters of Charity. 

Maternity. 

1856 

Yes. 

No. 

20 

3 

1 

2 

4 


4 








22 

South Baltimore Eye, Ear, Nose, 
and Throat Charity Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

Eye, ear, nose, and throat... 

1901 

No. 

Yes. 

14 

2 9 

1 

8 

2 3 


3 




23 

1211 Light St. 

Sydenham Hospital. 

City of Baltimore. 

Scarlet fever and diphtheria. 
General. 

1909 

No. 

No. 

28 

6 

2 

4 

6 


6 

24 

Union Protestant Infirmary. 

Private corporation. 

1852 

Yes. 

No. 

100 

44 

6 

38 

56 

6 

50 

1514 Division St. 




25 

U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1819 

0) 

Yes. 

13 

1 

1 


3 

8 3 


Fort McHenry. 

U. S. Government . 






26 

U. S. Marine Hospital . 

General . 

1884 

No. 

Yes. 

85 

5 

5 


3 

3 


Thirty-first St. and Reming- 










ton Ave. 













27 

University Hospital. 

University of Maryland. 

General. 

1823 

Yes. 

Yes. 

300 

33 

16 

17 

78 


78 

Lombard and Greene Sts. 




28 

University of Maryland Lying-in 
Hospital. 

University of Maryland . 

Maternity . 

1887 

No. 

Yes. 

55 

5 

3 

2 

( l ) 


0) 








Lombard and Greene Sts. 













29 

West End Maternity Hospital . 

Private corporation . 

Obstetrical . 

1900 

Yes. 

Yes. 

20 

3 

1 

2 

2 


2 

112 North Calhoun SL 









Cambridge: 













30 

Cambridge Maryland Hospital .... 

United Charities Hospital 
Association. 

General . 

1898 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

13 


13 

15 


15 





1 Not reported. 

2 Includes report of dispensary. 

8 Includes report of Home Department and Dispensary. 

* Transferred in 1911 from Sisters of Charity to Methodist Hospital Association. 
6 Exclusive of out-patients. 










































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


291 


SANITARIUMS: 1910—Continued. 


PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING YEAR. 


PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 


Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Adults 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

340 

112 

228 

5 

4 

1 

5 


2,500 

1,400 

1,100 

9 

5 

4 

9 


122 

50 

72 

5 

1 

4 

3 


95 

49 

46 






158 

68 

90 

o) 

0 

0) 

c 1 ) 

o) 

368 

368 


39 

39 


39 


844 

472 

372 

24 

16 

8 

13 

1 

1,693 

611 

1,082 

123 

33 

90 

118 


872 

375 

497 

30 

(■) 

0 

30 


2,140 

640 

1,500 

92 

35 

57 

77 

1 

174 

0 

o) 

50 

c) 

0) 


5 

578 


578 

31 


31 

31 


5,273 

2,601 

2,672 

301 

158 

143 

301 


6 2,099 

(0 

0 

(■) 

0 

(■) 

(>) 

0 

917 

398 

519 

0 

0 

(*) 

(■) 

(>) 

6,472 

0 

0 

220 

(■) 

0 

o) 

0) 

654 

487 

167 

158 

116 

42 

152 


179 

(■) 

o) 

0 

(*) 

0) 


(>) 

876 

469 

407 

14 

9 

5 

14 


696 

438 

258 

5 

1 

4 

5 


338 

173 

165 

17 

0 

< i ) 


1 

1,362 

730 

632 

111 

47 

64 

93 

1 

3,003 

1,836 

1,167 

210 

0 

0) 

(•) 

0 

536 

236 

300 

17 

4 

13 

17 


70 


70 

15 


15 

15 


213 

93 

120 

9 

3 

6 

6 


190 

94 

96 

27 

15 

12 

5 

2 

1,308 

(■) 

(■) 

70 

44 

26 

45 

2 

206 

206 


4 

4 


4 


6 627 

627 


52 

52 


52 


3,073 

1,773 

1,300 

0) 

0 

(■) 

0 

( i ) 

525 


525 

(■) 

0 

0 

(•) 

(■) 

83 


83 

10 


10 

10 

. 

790 

(*) 

0 

28 

21 

7 

26 



17 

18 


RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 


Total. 


$8,516 
0 ) 

1,507 

6,983 


7,713 

0 ) 

2 20,488 

82, 453 

20,120 

3 73,158 

13,351 

136,840 

2 385,771 
40,113 
18,337 

2 71,274 

0 ) 
11,321 
2 16,030 

3,396 

2 11,000 

2 59,524 
2 61,622 
2 15,369 

(*) 

2 8,301 

24,108 
74,005 

0 ) 

36,015 

9 92,422 
( 10 ) 

4,300 

17,580 


Derived from— 


Appro¬ 

pria¬ 

tions. 


$ 2,000 
0) 

500 

2,500 


5,700 

0) 

8, 700 


6,300 

7,000 

9,198 
1,875 


20,186 
10,507 

27,025 

0) 

4,040 


1,500 


9,563 
17,373 
3,000 

(«) 

1,625 

24,108 

8,000 

0) 

36,015 
25,750 


Dona¬ 

tions. 


3,500 

10,000 


$241 

0) 


Care of 
patients. 


2,817 


255 


575 

4,190 

299 

22,573 

851 

25,146 


61 


842 

250 

851 


732 

2,181 

956 

( 6 ) 

1,780 


3,105 


$5,575 

C 1 ) 

1,007 

1,566 


1,727 

0) 

6,503 

60,683 
13,521 
40,662 

1,186 

28,556 

160,426 
18,947 
6,563 

44,249 


1,189 
4,712 

1,045 


34,140 

42,068 

11,366 

( 6 ) 

2,359 


58,824 

0) 


66,672 


800 

7,491 


Other 

sources. 


$700 

0) 


100 


31 


4,710 

17,580 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 


Total. 


2,923 

2,116 

81,263 

225,345 

980 

1,206 


5,250 
11,068 


11,000 

15,089 


47 

( 6 ) 

2,537 


4,076 


89 


$8,491 
0) 

2,501 

6,122 


0) 

0) 

2 20,952 

82,453 
20,676 

3 75,658 

14,482 

130,714 

2 428,520 
47,358 
16,323 

2 71,274 
0) 

11,941 
2 15,097 

3,396 

2 20,000 

2 57,318 
2 61,997 
2 18,133 

( 6 ) 

2 7,414 

23,698 
82,178 

0) 

36,015 

9 107,442 
( 10 ) 

6,200 

17,562 


For 

running 
ex¬ 
penses. 


$7,849 

C 1 ) 

2,121 

6,122 


For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 


6,556 

28,000 

19.810 

77,209 
18,654 
69,421 

14,482 

47,211 

358,515 
46,225 
16,323 

69,962 

11,941 

14.811 

3,396 

11,000 

53,121 
49,175 
14,691 

(*) 
7,414 

17,101 
70,748 

0) 

0) 

101,338 
( 10 ) 

6,000 

17,562 


6 Included in report of St. Vincent's Infant Asylum. 
i Instruction for Hospital Corps. 

8 Enlisted men, Hospital Corps. 

9 Includes report of University of Maryland Lying-in Hospital. 
Included in report of University Hospital. 


$642 

Q) 

380 


(0 
0) 
1,142 

5,244 

2,022 

6,237 


83,503 

70,005 

1,133 


1,312 
0) 


286 


9,000 

4,197 
12,822 
3,442 
( 6 ) 


6,597 
11,430 

0) 

0) 

6,104 
( 10 ) 

200 


VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 


Total. 


$10,411 


22,000 

20,000 


0) 

2 35,000 

541,138 
57,000 
3 339,510 

0) 

117,037 

2 6,177,870 
200,000 
45,000 

2 250,000 
0) 

0) 

2 117,000 
6,000 
0) 

2 207,500 
2 250,000 
2 22,885 
(*) 

2 20,000 

44,000 

186,000 

0) 

200,000 

0) 

0) 

10,000 

90,000 


Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 


$10,411 


12,000 

20,000 


In¬ 

vested 

funds. 


$10,000 


0) 
35,000 

( l ) 
57,000 
303,796 

80,000 

107.500 

2,789,125 
200,000 
45,000 

250,000 
0) 

0) 

50,000 

6,000 

2 32,000 

207.500 
250,000 

22,885 

( 6 ) 

20,000 

44,000 

160,000 

0) 

200,000 

0) 


(!) 

35,714 

0) 

9,537 
3,388,745 


10,000 

90,000 


67,000 


0) 


26,000 


0 ) 


18 

19 

20 
21 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 

9 

10 
11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

15 

17 

18 

19 

20 
21 
22 

23 

24 

25 

26 

27 

28 

29 

30 





























































































































































292 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table IV.— HOSPITALS AND 


£ 

a 


3 

a 

a 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


o 


i 

t-H 


31 

32 


33 

34 

35 

36 

37 

38 

39 

40 

41 

42 

43 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 

21 

22 


MARYLAN D—Continued. 
Cumberland: 

Allegany Hospital. 

49 Decatur St. 

Home and Infirmary of Western 
Maryland. 

Baltimore Ave. 

Easton: 

Emergency Hospital. 

Washington St. 

Elkton: 

Union Hospital of Cecil County... 
Singerly Ave. and Cathedral St. 
Fort Howard: 

U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

Fort Washington: 

U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

Frederick: 

Frederick City Hospital. 

Park Ave. 

Hagerstown: 

Hagerstown Hospital. 

Reisterstown: 

Jewish Home for Consumptives... 
Westminster Pike. 

Salisbury: 

Peninsula General Hospital____ 

State Sanatorium: 

Maryland Tuberculosis Sanato¬ 
rium. 

Towson: 

Hospital for Consumptives of 
Maryland. 

Washington Grove: 

Starmont Sanatorium. 

MASSACHUSETTS. 


Adams: 

Greylock Rest Sanatorium. 

Baldwinsville: 

Hospital Cottages for Children. 

Belmont: 

Convalescent Hospital. 

Pleasant St. (Waverley P. O.). 
Beverly: 

Beverly Hospital.:. 

Herrick St. 

Boston: 

Adams Nervine Asylum. 

990 Centre St. (Jamaica Plain). 
Boston City Hospital- 

Convalescent Home 8 . 

2150 Dorchester Ave. 

East Boston Relief Station. 

14 Porter St. 

Haymarket Square Relief Station 
Haymarket Square. 

Hospital Proper. 

818 Harrison Ave. 

South Department. 

745 Massachusetts Ave. 

Boston Consumptives’ Hospital... 
249 River St. 

Boston Lying-in Hospital. 

24 McLean St. 

Brigham Hospital and North End 
Dispensary. 

26 Charter St. 

Carney Hospital. 

Old Harbor St.(South Boston). 

Children’s Hospital. 

Huntington Ave. 

Faulkner Hospital. 

Centre St. (Jamaica Plain). 

Grace Hospital. 

144 Kingston St. 

House of the Good Samaritan. 

Francis and Binney Sts. 

Infants’ Hospital. 

37 Blossom St. 

Massachusetts Charitable Eye and 
Ear Infirmary. 

233 Charles St. 

Massachusetts General Hospital... 
Blossom St. 

Massachusetts Homeopathic Hos¬ 
pital. 

82 East Concord St. 


Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of cases treated. 

Sisters of Charity of St. Vin- 

General. 

cent de Paul. 


Private corporation. 

General. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

Washington County Hospi- 

General, except chronic and 

tal Association. 

contagious. 

Federated Jewish Charities.. 

Tubercular. 

Private organization. 

General, except contagious 

State of Maryland. 

and incurable. 

Tubercular. 

Private corporation. 

Tubercular. 

Private corporation. 

Tubercular. 

Sisters of Providence. 

Chronic and nervous. 

Private corporation. 

Epileptic, nervous, and crip- 

Massachusetts General Hos- 

pled. 

Convalescent. 

pital Corporation. 


Private corporation. 

General, except chronic, con- 

Private corporation. 

tagious, and tubercular. 

Neurotic... 

City of Boston. 

General. 

City of Boston. 

Emergency. 

City of Boston. 

Emergency. 

City of Boston. 

General. 

City of Boston. 

Infectious. 

City of Boston. 

Tubercular. 

Private corporation. 

Maternity. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

Sisters of Charity. 

General, except contagious.. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious 

Private corporation. 

and incurable. 

General. 

Private corporation. 

Chronic. 

Private corporation. 

General.... 

Private corporation. 

Eye and ear. 

Massachusetts General Hos- 

General, except chronic. 

pital Corporation. 

Private corporation. 

General. 




Year founded. 

Training school for 

nurses. 

Colored patients re¬ 

ceived. 

Number of beds. 

MEDICAL STAFF 
AT CLOSE OF 
YEAR. 

NURSES AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 

Total. 

Resident. 

Visiting. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

1905 

Yes. 

Yes. 

46 

25 


25 

12 

2 

10 

1883 

Yes. 

Yes. 

60 

(>) 

21 

( l ) 

32 

16 

16 

1906 

Yes. 

Yes. 

25 

23 

7 

16 

8 


8 

1908 

Yes. 

Yes. 

25 

12 


12 

8 


8 

1900 

(*) 

Yes. 

18 

2 

2 


10 

4 10 


1897 

( 3 ) 

Yes. 

24 

2 


2 

2 

4 2 


1897 

Yes. 

No. 

50 

20 


20 

8 

1 

7 

1905 

Yes. 

Yes. 

20 

13 

3 

10 

10 


10 

1908 

Yes. 

No. 

50 

19 

1 

18 

4 

1 

3 

1897 

Yes. 

Yes. 

46 

20 


20 

14 


14 

1907 

Yes. 

No. 

212 

4 

4 


18 


18 

1894 

Yes. 

No. 

105 

6 

3 

3 

5 


5 

1905 

No. 

No. 

35 

2 

1 

1 

3 


3 

1902 

No. 

No. 

35 

5 


5 

10 


10 

1882 

No. 

Yes. 

140 

18 

3 

15 

12 


12 

1882 

No. 

Yes. 

36 

1 


1 

1 


1 

1893 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

13 


13 

15 


15 

1877 

Yes. 

No. 

52 

2 

2 


25 

3 

22 

1890 

No. 

Yes. 

36 

( l ) 

G) 

3 

2 


2 

1908 

No. 

Yes. 

10 

0) 

2 

0) 

7 

4 

3 

1902 

No. 

Yes. 

20 

G) 

8 

( l ) 

8 

4 

4 

1864 

Yes. 

Yes. 

655 

154 

47 

107 

172 

59 

113 

1895 

Yes. 

Yes. 

340 

( l ) 

11 

0) 

40 

6 

34 

1906 

No. 

Yes. 

200 

11 

5 

6 

7 

6 

1 

1832 

Yes. 

Yes. 

52 

5 

2 

3 

21 


21 

1888 

0) 

0) 

5 

0) 

G) 

G) 

0) 

G) 

0) 

1863 

Yes. 

Yes. 

200 

30 

18 

12 

60 


60 

1869 

Yes. 

Yes. 

75 

34 

4 

30 

36 


36 

1900 

Yes. 

Yes. 

30 

5 


5 

13 


13 

1891 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

19 

4 

15 

15 


15 

1861 

No. 

No. 

43 

8 

1 

7 

12 


12 

1881 

Yes. 

Yes. 

24 

25 


25 

15 


15 

1824 

Yes. 

Yes. 

215 

64 

4 

60 

35 


35 

1811 

Yes. 

Yes. 

321 

w 118 

28 

90 

160 


160 

1855 

Yes. 

Yes. 

350 

72 

10 

62 

104 

4 

100 


1 Not reported. 4 Enlisted men, Hospital Corps. 

2 Equipment. 8 Included in report of Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston. 

3 Instruction for Hospital Corps. 8 Women only. 

































































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


293 


SANITARIUMS: 1910—Continued. 


PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING YEAR. 

PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 

RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Adults 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

Total. 

Appro¬ 

pria¬ 

tions. 

Derived 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

from— 

Care of 
patients. 

Other 

sources. 

449 

271 

178 

22 

16 

6 

21 

1 

(‘) 


(‘) 

(') 

(*) 

689 

365 

324 

31 

(‘) 

(0 

(') 

0 ) 

$15,697 

$8,600 


$7,064 

$33 

196 

(‘) 

0 ) 

18 

( l ) 

(‘) 

(■) 

(‘) 

6,873 

3,500 


2,278 

1,095 

172 

87 

85 

16 

8 

8 

12 

4 

5,734 

4,000 

$69 

1,665 


379 

379 


9 

9 


9 


(i) 

0 ) 


m 


499 

499 


8 

8 


8 


(‘) 

(‘) 


o) 









* 



516 

228 

288 

38 

14 

24 

29 

9 

18,761 

8,200 

199 

9,815 

547 

264 

115 

149 

26 

7 

19 

21 

5 

13,960 

9,000 

1,025 

3,935 


108 

69 

39 

38 

22 

16 

36 

2 

15,619 

911 

13,728 

420 

560 

720 

360 

360 

32 

16 

16 

28 

4 

15,450 

10,450 

500 

4,500 


574 

303 

271 

210 

110 

100 

196 

14 

80.000 

60,000 


20,000 


266 

121 

145 

83 

35 

48 

79 

4 

32,536 

17,200 

13,453 

1,267 

616 

89 

36 

53 

19 

6 

13 

19 


17,697 


685 

16,612 

400 

322 

50 

272 

16 

3 

13 

16 


11,809 


125 

11,684 


170 

100 

70 

130 

73 

57 

26 

104 

41,939 

17,282 

511 

5,029 

19,117 

663 

0 ) 

(') 

( l ) 

(>) 

0 ) 

28 

(‘) 

( 6 ) 


( 5 ) 

( 5 ) 

( 5 ) 

544 

220 

324 

24 

8 

16 

22 

2 

27,511 


9,694 

13,859 

3,958 

197 

66 

• 131 

49 

14 

35 

49 


58,379 



22,914 

35,465 

376 


376 

26 


26 

26 


12,047 

7 12,043 


8 4 

177 

143 

34 

3 

2 

1 

3 


16,335 

7 16,154 


8 179 

8 2 

867 

697 

170 

7 

6 

1 

7 


30,4SS 

7 30,009 


s 477 

8 2 

10,834 

6,278 

4,556 

490 

240 

250 

490 


! 396,226 

7 324,530 

511 

8 68,772 

9 2,413 

3,025 

1,500 

1,525 

254 

125 

129 

41 

213 

178,817 

7 121,905 


8 56,876 

8 36 

869 

567 

302 

178 

93 

85 

171 

7 

•o 190,000 

190,000 




n 2,836 


2,836 

49 


49 

49 


37,220 

15,150 

9,717 

12,353 

3,460 

( l ) 

(') 

C 1 ) 

(0 

0 ) 

(■) 

0 ) 

2,233 


1,300 

753 

180 

3,674 

1,799 

1,875 

100 

42 

58 

87 

13 

io 111,426 


12,203 

51,434 

47,789 

n 7,910 

4,434 

3,476 

62 

25 

37 


62 

47,760 


5,677 

10,118 

31,965 

440 

163 

277 

12 

4 

8 

11 

1 

20,423 


5,525 

11,870 

9,028 

29,740 

22,305 

7,435 

15 

13 

2 

15 


29,228 


2,371 

19,332 

7,525 

195 

32 

163 

40 

5 

35 

25 

15 

27,859 


15,473 


12,380 

289 

164 

125 

21 

12 

9 


21 

io 15,734 


4,302 

329 

11,103 

3,556 

2,002 

1,554 

163 

(■) 

(>) 

0 ) 

(') 

92,081 

35,000 

553 

7,750 

48,778 

6,392 

3,644 

2,748 

286 

168 

118 

(') 

0 ) 

'2 805,872 


145,034 

458,932 

201,906 

4,900 

1,803 

3,097 

181 

71 

110 

130 

51 

io 234,321 


103,924 

130,397 



PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. j 

Total. 

For 

miming 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

(’) 

(■) 

o) 

(>) 

(‘) 

. (*) 

1 31 

$15,979 

$14,848 

$1,131 

$ 100,000 

S100,000 


32 

7,027 

7,027 


2 2,500 

2 2,500 


33 

5,670 

5,670 


18,000 

18,000 


34 

(0 

0 ) 

(*) 

(’) 

0 ) 


35 

(■) 

(') 

(0 

(>) 

(') 


36 

18,702 

18,702 


50,000 

50,000 


37 

13,700 

13, 700 


77,000 

37,000 

$40,000 

38 

17,871 

16,642 

1,229 

77,984 

76,000 

1,984 

39 

15,550 

13,000 

2,550 

75,000 

75,000 


40 

86,889 

73,133 

13,756 

301, 789 

301,789 


41 

31,100 

26,069 

5,031 

150,186 

149,848 

338 

42 

18, ISO 

16,487 

1,693 

25,000 

25,000 


43 

11,576 

10,545 

1,031 

50,000 

> 

50,000 


1 

36,363 

35,565 

798 

412,222 

92,000 

320,222 

2 

( 5 ) 

( 5 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 5 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

3 

28,661 

25,347 

3,314 

208,430 

147,002 

61,434 

4 

75,521 

59,557 

15,964 

910,064 

129,000 

781,064 

5 

12,047 

12,047 


54,000 

54,000 


6 

16,335 

16,335 


39,700 

39,700 


7 

30,488 

30,488 


361,000 

361,000 


8 

396,226 

368,334 

27,892 

2,562,803 

2,485,055 

77,748 

9 

178,817 

111,296 

67,521 

1,017,521 

1,017,521 


10 

io 188,020 

163,741 

24,279 

10 385,398 

385,398 


11 

32,758 

32,758 


364,539 

94,100 

270,439 

12 

2,128 

2,128 


11,000 

11,000 


13 

io 109,345 

109,345 


io 257,900 

252,900 

5,000 

14 

60,644 

60,644 


1,416,524 

410,742 

1,005,782 

15 

27,080 

26,356 

724 

306,307 

138,231 

168,076 

16 

29,277 

29,277 


2 10,000 

2 10,000 


17 

26,841 

26,841 


527,127 

244,134 

282,993 

18 

io 15,834 

15,834 


io 123,990 

32,900 

91,090 

19 

105,720 

105,720 


1,121,079 

565,334 

555,745 

20 

12 765,138 

755,775 

9,363 

> 2 7,510,646 

3,871,643 

3,639,003 

21 

io 240,938 

192,567 

48,371 

io 1,682,103 

482,568 

1,199,535 

22 


7 Exclusive of amount covered into city treasury. 

8 Covered into city treasury. 

8 Includes $402 covered into city treasury. 


18 Includes report of dispensary, 
n Includes out-patients. 

12 Includes report of dispensary and of Convalescent and McLean Hospitals, Belmont, Mass. 




























































































































































294 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table IV.—HOSPITALS AND 







1-4 

O 

«*-» 

1 

© 

t-4 


MEDICAL STAFF 
AT CLOSE OF 

NURSES AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 

£ 






00 


YEAR. 





a 

a 

Cl 

NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of cases treated. 

TJ* 

© 

TJ 

o . 

rCj 00 
o © 

CO CO 

H 

fl 

TJ 

J 
**—« 







_o 

+-> 

4-> 

B 

HH 

• 



j> 

1-4 

c3 

© 

tuu ^ 

c3 

c 

H 

© 

tJ 

© 

f-4 

O 

o 

O 

u 

© 

a 

3 

fc 

13 

O 

a 

© 

TJ 

% 

© 

.9 

13 

o 

e» 

© 

s 

^© 

13 

a 

© 


MASSACHUSETTS-Continued. 














B oston—C ontinued. 







10 



24 


24 

23 

New England Baptist Hospital... 
Parker Hill Ave. (Roxbury). 

Private corporation (Baptist) 


1893 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 


10 



40 


40 

21 


21 

24 

New England Deaconess Hospital. 
175 Bellevue St. 

New England Deaconess As¬ 
sociation. 


1896 

Yes. 

No. 

50 




46 


34 

40 



25 

New England Hospital for Women 
and Children. 


General, except contagious.. 

1859 

Yes. 

Yes. 

190 

12 


40 










Dimock St. 













26 


Boston Association for Relief 
and Control of Tubercu- 

Tubercular (convalescent) .. 

1909 

No. 

No. 

12 

1 


1 




Harvard St. (Mattapan). 









losis. 






( 2 ) 



30 



27 

St. Elizabeth’s Hospital... 


General. 

1868 

Yes. 

Yes. 

110 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


30 

61 West Brookline St. 



( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 



28 

St. Mary’s Lying-in Hospital. 

Sisters of Charity. 

Obstetrical. 

1869 

Yes. 

Yes. 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

11 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

90 Cushing Ave. (Dorchester). 




29 

St.. MomV.a , s Homp, for Sink Colored 


Chronio ; cardiac, and tuber- 

1888 

No. 

Yes. 

20 

4 


4 

2 


2 

Women and Children. 


cular. 








30 

125 Highland St. (Roxbury). 
Tyler Street Hospital. 

Boston Dispensary. 

General, except contagious.. 

1909 

No. 

Yes. 

16 

5 


5 

7 


7 

62 Tyler St. 








31 

U. S. Army Post Hospital_ 

IT. S. Government,. 

General. 

1899 

( 5 ) 

Yes. 

16 

2 


2 

9 

6 9 


Fort Blanks (Winthrop). 






(«) 

(«) 


32 

TJ. S. Army Post Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

( 2 ) 

( 5 ) 

Yes. 

16 

1 

1 



Fort Strong. 






6 5 


33 

U. S. Army Post Hospital. 


General.... 

( 2 ) 

( 6 ) 

Yes. 

12 

1 

1 


5 


Fort Warren. 






10 



34 

Vincent Memorial Hospital 7 . 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1890 

No. 

Yes. 

24 

3 


3 


10 

125 South Huntington Ave. 






15 


35 

Woman’s Charity Club Hospital.. 
53 Parker Hill Ave. (Roxbury). 

Private corporation. 

Gynecological and surgical.. 

1893 

Yes. 

Yes. 

30 

6 

1 

5 


15 








Brockton: 













36 

Brockton Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1896 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

12 


12 

20 

1 

19 

680 Centre*St. 








37 

Detention Hospital 8 . 

City of Brockton. 

Contagious. 

( 2 ) 










Brookline: 












38 

Brookline Board of Health Hospital 
Newton St. 

City of Brookline. 

Contagious. 

1894 

No. 

Yes. 

75 

2 


2 

6 


6 








39 

Free Hospital for Women. 

Private corporation. 

Gynecological. 

1875 

Yes. 

Yes. 

60 

6 

1 

5 

19 


19 

Pond" Ave. 







Cambridge: 













40 

Cambridge Diphtheria Hospital... 
59 Reservoir St. 

City of.Cambridge. 

Diphtheria. 

1899 

No. 

Yes. 

23 

1 


1 

4 


4 









41 

Cambridge Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1871 

Yes. 

Yes. 

60 

17 

3 

14 

28 

2 

26 

330 Mount Auburn St. 






42 

Cambridge Relief Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious... 

1905 

No. 

Yes. 

21 

6 

4 

2 

9 

1 

8 

199 Prospect St. 




43 

Cambridge Tuberculosis Hospital. 
Concord Ave. 

City of Cambridge. 

Tubercular. 

1908 

No. 

Yes. 

56 

5 

1 

4 

5 


5 








44 

Holy Ghost Hospital for Incurables 
1575 Cambridge St. 

Grey Nuns. 

Incurable, except mental 
and nervous. 

1893 

No. 

Yes. 

115 

12 


12 

38 

8 

30 





Chelsea: 













45 

Rufus S. Frost General Hospital... 
100 Bellingham St. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1890 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

29 


29 

16 


16 




46 

U. S. Marine Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1804 

No. 

Yes. 

150 

4 

4 


6 

6 


High St. 







47 

U. S. Naval Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

( 2 ) 

No. 

Yes. 

143 

4 

4 


22 

22 


12 Broadway. 








Clinton: 













48 

Clinton Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1889 

Yes. 

Yes. 

29 

8 


8 

16 


16 

Highland St. 






Everett: 













49 

Everett Smallpox Hospital 9 . 

City of Everett. 

Smallpox. 

1902 

No. 

( 2 ) 

8 







60 Fuller St. 









50 

Whidden Memorial Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

18% 

Yes. 

Yes. 

17 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

13 

9 


9 

Fremont A ve.and Lawrence St. 




Fall River: 













51 

Bay View Hospital. 

City of Fall River. 

Pulmonary tubercular. 

1803 

No. 

Yes. 

55 

1 


1 


1 

6 

’ Bay and Woodman Sts. 





52 

Contagious Hospital. 

City of Fall River. 

Contagious. 

1903 

No. 

Yes. 

12 

1 


1 

2 


2 

2647 Highland Ave. 







53 

Fall River City Hospital... 

City of Fall River_ 

General. 

1895 

No. 

Yes. 

88 

28 

i 

27 

14 

3 

ii 

Stanley St. 




54 

St. Ann’s Hospital. 

Dominican Sisters of Charity 
of the Presentation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1906 

No. 

Yes. 

110 

19 

i 

18 

31 


31 

795 Middle St. 


55 

Union Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1900 

Yes. 

Yes. 

80 

20 

2 

18 

28 

i 

27 

538 Prospect St. 





Fitchburg: 













56 

Burbank Hospital. 

City of Fitchburg. 

General, except contagious 
and mental. 

1890 

Yes. 

Yes. 

60 

10 

i 

9 

26 

1 

25 

Nichols St. 




Foxboro: 













57 

Foxboro State Hospital. 

State of Massachusetts. 

Inebriate, drug habitue, and 
chronic insane. 

1893 

Yes. 

Yes. 

422 

4 

3 

1 

22 

22 


Gloucester: 














58 

Addison Gilbert Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1889 

Yes. 

Yes. 

30 

15 


15 

14 

1 

13 

298 Washington St. 





Gosnold: 













59 

Penikese Hospital. 

State of Massachusetts. 

Leprosy. 

1905 

No. 

Yes. 

19 

2 

1 

1 

1 


1 

Penikese P. O. 







Greenfield: 













60 

Franklin County Public Hospital. 
High and Sanderson Sts. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1895 

Yes. 

Yes. 

46 

6 


6 

14 


14 








1 Includes report of dispensary. 4 Included in report of Boston Dispensary. 

1 Not reported. 5 Instruction for Hospital Corps. 

3 Included in report of St. Mary’s Infant Asylum. 6 Enlisted men, Hospital Corps. 













































































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


295 


SANITARIUMS: 1910—Continued. 


PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING YEAR. 

PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE 

OF YEAR. 


RECEIPTS DURING 

YEAR. 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. || 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Adults 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

Total. 

Appro¬ 

pria¬ 

tions. 

Derived 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

from— 

Care of 
patients. 

Other 

sources. 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

553 

183 

370 

12 

8 

4 

12 


$36,641 


$2,576 

$32,186 

$1,879 

$28,520 

$25,432 

$3,088 

$57,000| 

$50,000 

$7,000 

23 

1,051 

322 

729 

43 

6 

37 

43 


47,157 


1,356 

45,275 

526 

42,490 

42,490 

192,418 

182,418 

10,000 

24 

1,278 

86 

1,192 

103 

2 

101 

65 

38 

i 66,948 


3,334 

29,118 

34,496 

>76,927 

76,927 


i 948,219 

403,500 

544,719 

25 

3G 

36 


10 

10 


10 


5,349 


3,164 

1,460 

725 

5,349 

3,608 

1,741 

7,500 

7,500 

26 

930 


930 

33 


33 

30 

3 

( 2 ) 


(2) 

24 485 

( 2 ) 

(2) 

22,597 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

74,000 

( 2 ) 

27 

260 


( 2 ) 

13 


13 

13 


( 3 ) 


( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

(3) 

( 3 ) 

(3) 

(3) 

( 3 ) 

28 

59 

1 

58 

19 

1 

18 

16 

3 

9,424 


2,856 

4,143 

2,425 

8,335 

6,884 

1,451 

15,200 

11,200 

4,000 

29 

310 

141 

169 

16 

7 

9 


16 

( 4 ) 


0) 

(4) 

(*) 

(4) 

(4) 


(4) 

( 4 ) 


30 

257 

257 


2 

2 


2 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

(2) 


31 

254 

213 

41 

4 

4 


4 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


32 

81 

81 


2 

2 


2 


(2) 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


33 

247 


247 

15 


15 

15 


17,350 

3 232 

8,457 

5,661 

16,477 

16,477 

211,060 

75,629 

135,431 

34 

214 


214 

25 


25 

25 


11,457 


5,649 

3,641 

2,167 

12,419 

11,276 

1,143 

84,600 

39,600 

45,000 

35 

852 

438 

414 

30 

15 

15 

27 

3 

27,534 

$3,500 

7,479 

14,859 

1,696 

29,223 

28,684 

539 

.112,793 

85,343 

27,450 

36 




















37 

80 

39 

41 

6 

1 

5 


6 

12,500 

» 9,398 


io 3,102 


9,483 

9,183 

300 

93,000 

93,000 


38 

464 


464 

42 


42 

42 


i 26,636 

* 7,256 

i 19,380 

( 2 ) 

i 22,225 

( 2 ) 

i 645,000 

i 350,000 

i 295,000 

39 

123 

62 

61 

10 

5 

5 

3 

7 

7,677 

9 4,799 


■o 2,878 

7,677 

7,677 

11,900 

11,900 

40 

806 

402 

404 

34 

16 

18 

34 


29,586 

5,164 

4,646 

19,776 

( 2 ) 

34,693 

( 2 ) 

535,496 

137,946 

397,550 

41 

7,600 

(*) 

(») 

(2) 

( 2 ) 

(2) 

(S) 

(2) 

12,567 


12,567 

12,648 

12,648 

16,000 

16,000 

42 

110 

66 

44 

36 

24 

12 

31 

5 

16,177 

9 14,096 


io 2,081 


16,177 

16,177 


20,000 

20,000 


43 

198 

120 

78 

111 

50 

61 

96 

15 

47,309 

30,185 

4,788 

6,940 

5,396 

45,076 

33,164 

11,912 

175,000 

175,000 


44 

701 

321 

380 

30 

14 

16 

30 


21,384 


4,064 

15,531 

1,789 

22,352 

22,352 


80,9.50 

64,000 

16,950 

45 

11 974 

974 


86 

86 


86 


47,467 

47,467 


47,467 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

300,000 

300,000 

46 

662 

662 


68 

68 


68 


(2) 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

44,660 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


47 

n 545 

212 

333 

25 

11 

14 

21 

4 

24,642 

1,885 

14,532 

8,225 

23,426 

21,036 

2,390 

119,301 

60,000 

59,301 

48 




















49 

226 

105 

121 

7 

4 

3 

7 


8,430 

400 


5,530 

2,500 

8,300 

8,000 

300 

10,000 

10,000 


50 

1K9 

98 

91 

53 

26 

27 

42 

11 

24,534 

20,234 


4,300 

24,534 

23,620 

914 

75,000 

75,000 


51 

24 

9 

15 

2 


2 


2 

4,160 

3,987 


173 


4,160 

4,160 



52 

1 133 

559 

574 

65 

27 

as 

47 

18 

12 30 457 

12 30, 457 




30,457 

30,457 


88,727 

88,727 


53 

547 

217 

330 

24 

5 

19 

24 

20,874 


495 

19,770 

609 

20,693 

18,444 

2,249 

115,000 

115,000 


54 

705 

346 

359 

37 

19 

IS 

31 

6 

43,712 


6,416 

31,144 

6,152 

37,497 

36,010 

1,487 

321,018 

209,583 

111,435 

55 

836 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

40 

21 

19 

32 

8 

54,909 

16,945 


8,976 

28,988 

54,909 

41,571 

13,338 

535,989 

207,156 

328,833 

56 

950 

95C 


383 

385 


383 


108,855 

100,734 


6,496 

1,625 

100,734 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

417,337 

417,337 


57 

383 

17$ 

205 

6 

( 2 ) 

... 

( 2 ) 

(2) 

( 2 ) 

15,105 

385 

7,824 

6,896 

16,728 

16,72* 

. 

211,734 

72,000 

139,734 

. 

58 

12 

4 

12 

£ 

i 

12 

10,506 

10,500 


26,506 

10, 50C 

16,000 

60,000 

60,000 

59 

368 

17$ 

1 

190 

21 

is 


IS 

2 

20,04( 

.. 

10,941 

t 

8,286 

819 

19,153 

9,6(k 

9,490 

81,000 

75,000 

6,000 

60 


i Women only. 10 Covered into city treasury, 

s Closed during 1910. 11 Exclusive of out-patients. 

s Exclusive of amount covered into city treasury. 12 Included in appropriation for City Pauper Department. 































































































































































































































Institution number. 


296 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table IV.— HOSPITALS AND 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


Supervised or conducted by— 


MASSACHUSETTS—Continued. 


01 

62 

63 

64 

65 

66 

67 

68 


69 

70 

71 

72 

73 

74 

75 

76 

77 

78 

79 

80 

81 

82 

83 

84 

85 

86 

87 

88 

89 

90 

91 

92 


93 


94 


Haverhill: 

Hale Hospital.. 

Buttonwoods Ave. 
Holyoke: 

Day Camp for Consumptives. 
"Westfield Road. 


Holyoke City Hospital. 

Beech St. 

House of Providence Hospital. 

679 Dwight St. 

Hull: 

U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

Fort Andrews. 

Lawrence: 

Isolation Hospital. 

Marston St. 

Lawrence General Hospital. 

Prospect and Garden Sts. 

Municipal Hospital for Tuber¬ 
culosis. 8 
Chickering St. 

Lowell: 

Corporation Hospital. 

Merrimack and Pawtucket Sts. 

Emergency Hospital. 

20 Tyler St. 

Lowell General Hospital. 

Varnum Ave. 

St. John’s Hospital. 

14 Bartlett St. 


Lynn: 


Emergency Hospit; 
42 High St. 


al. 


Lynn Hospital. 

212 Boston St. 

Lynn Hospital for Contagious 
"Diseases. 

131 Holyoke St. 

Union Hospital. 

Linwood Road. 

Malden: 

Contagious Hospital. 

Forest St. 

Malden Hospital. 

Hospital Road. 

Marlborough: 

Marlborough Hospital. 

Hildreth St. 

Medford: 

Dearborn Hospital. 

2 Central Ave. 

Melrose: 

Melrose Hospital. 

75 Myrtle St. 

New England Sanitarium. 

Spot Pond. 

Milford: 

Milford Hospital. 

Main and Prospect Sts. 
Monson: 

Monson State Hospital. 

Palmer P. O. 

Montague City: 

Farren Memorial Hospital. 

Natick: 

Leonard Morse Hospital. 

Union St. 

New Bedford: 

New Bedford Emergency Hospital 
194 Purchase St. 

New Bedford Tuberculosis Sanato¬ 
rium. 

Clifford P. O. 

St. Luke’s Hospital. 

Allen and Page Sts. 

U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

Fort Rodman. 

Newburyport: 

Anna Jaques Hospital. 

Highland Ave. 

Newburyport Homeopathic Hos¬ 
pital. 

267 High St. 

Newton: 

Newton Hospital. 

2014 Washington St. (Newton 
Lower Falls). 

North Adams: 

North Adams Hospital. 

Eagle St. and Hospital Ave. 


Private corporation. 

Holyoke Association for Pre¬ 
vention and Relief of Tu¬ 
berculosis. 

Private corporation. 

Sisters of Providence. 

U. S. Government. 

City of Lawrence. 

Ladies’ Union Charitable 
Society. 

City of Lawrence. 

Private association. 

Private organization. 

Private corporation.. 

Sisters of Charity.. 

Private corporation.. 

Private corporation.. 

City of Lynn. 

Private corporation. 

City of Malden. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private individual. 

Private corporation. 

Seventh Day Adventists 

Private corporation. 

State of Massachusetts. 

Sisters of Providence.. 

Private organization.. 

Private corporation. 

New Bedford Anti-Tuber¬ 
culosis Association. 

Private corporation. 

U. S. Government. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 


Class of cases treated. 

Year founded. 

Training school for 

nurses. 

Colored patients re¬ 

ceived. 

Number of beds. 

MEDICAL STAFF 
AT CLOSE OF 
YEAR. 

NURSES AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 

Total. 

Resident. 

Visiting. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

General... 

1880 

Yes. 

Yes. 

32 

15 

1 

14 

18 


18 

Tubercular. 

1908 

No. 

No. 

12 

0) 



C 1 ) 



General. 

1891 

Yes. 

Yes. 

75 

12 


12 

30 


30 

General. 

1876 

Yes. 

Yes. 

70 

23 

1 

22 

25 


25 

General. 

1901 

( 3 ) 

Yes. 

45 

1 

1 


4 

< 4 


Smallpox. 

1902 

No. 

Yes. 

25 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

(*) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

General. 

1875 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

22 

2 

20 

34 

1 

33 

Tubercular. 

1909 

No. 

Yes 

100 

10 


10 

3 


3 

General. 

1839 

Yes. 

Yes. 

85 

«2 

2 


8 19 


19 

General. 

1893 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

General. 

1893 

Yes. 

Yes. 

70 

22 


22 

25 


25 

General, except chronic and 

1867 

Yes. 

Yes. 

68 

24 

2 

22 

20 


20 

contagious. 











General, except contagious 

1891 

No. 

Yes. 

5 

4 

1 

3 

2 


2 

and insane. 











General,except chronic, con- 

1880 

Yes. 

Yes. 

90 

26 

3 

23 

24 


24 

tagious, and venereal. 











Scarlet fever and diphtheria. 

1895 

No. 

Yes. 

36 

2 


2 

6 


6 

General. 

1904 

Yea 

Yes. 

35 

(*) 

18 

( 2 ) 

18 


18 

Contagious. 

1907 

Yes. 

Yes. 

18 

1 


1 

6 


6 

General. 

1890 

Yes. 

Yes. 

80 

21 

1 

20 

21 


21 

Emergency. 

1890 

No. 

Yes. 

22 

12 


12 

6 


6 

Chronic, convalescent, nerv- 

,1903 

Yes. 

Yes. 

25 

1 


1 

5 

1 

4 

ous, and maternity. 











General. 

1893 

Yes. 

Yes. 

18 

6 19 

12 

7 

8 12 


12 

General. 

1899 

Yes. 

No. 

70 

3 

3 


49 

11 

38 

General. 

1900 

Yes. 

Yes. 

20 

9 


9 

15 


15 

Epileptic. 

1898 

Yes. 

Yes. 

900 

5 

5 


86 

43 

43 

General. 

1900 

Yes. 

Yes. 

45 

10 


10 

13 

1 

12 

General. 

1899 

Yes. 

Yes. 

25 

8 


8 

12 


12 

General. 

1901 

Yes. 

Yes. 

16 

5 

1 

4 

6 

1 

5 

Tubercular. 

1907 

No. 

Yes. 

26 

15 


15 

4 


4 

General. 

1884 

Yes. 

Yes. 

150 

17 

3 

14 

34 


34 

General. 

1899 

(3) 

Yes. 

10 

1 

1 


5 

4 5 


General. 

1883 

Yes. 

Yes. 

40 

10 


10 

16 


16 

General. 

1906 

Yes. 

Yes. 

30 

4 


4 

13 


13 

General, except smallpox 

1881 

Yes. 

Yes. 

150 

21 

2 

19 

72 


72 

and venereal. 

• 











General, except contagious 

1883 

Yes. 

Yes. 

65 

40 


40 

19 


19 

and insane. 












1 Camp closed November 1,1910. 


2 Not reported. 


3 Instruction for Hospital Corps. 




























































































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


297 


SANITARIUMS: 1910—Continued. 


PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING YEAR. 

PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE 

OF YEAR. 


RECEIPTS DURING 

YEAR. 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. j| 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Adults 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

Total. 

Derived from— 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

Appro¬ 

pria¬ 

tions. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
patients. 

Other 

sources. 

614 

295 

319 

26 

12 

14 

25 

1 

823,026 


$2,967 

$15,922 

$4,137 

$23,220 

$23,220 


$169,302 

$81,235 

$88,067 

61 

25 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

* 

(!) 





1,870 


1,720 

150 

1,979 

1,979 


500 

500 

62 

1,369 

579 

790 

60 

28 

32 

44 

16 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

33,284 

( j ) 

( 2 > 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

63 

1,138 

529 

609 

38 

18 

20 

32 

6 

23,963 


163 

20,733 

3,067 

22,014 

20,878 

$1,136 

( 2 ) 

70,000 

( 2 ) 

64 

370 

370 


3 

3 


3 


( 2 ) 

(2) 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


65 

2 

2 







609 

$609 



609 

609 

5,642 

5,642 


66 

1,203 

555 

648 

47 

20 

27 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

41,275 

8,866 

24,197 

8,212 

( 2 ) 

38,686 

( 2 ) 

294,464 

158,813 

135,651 

67 

30 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

25 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( a ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

< 2 ) 

47,301 

47,301 


68 

1,300 

754 

546 

58 

30 

28 

52 

6 

6 26,393 


15,000 

11,170 

223 

6 26,379 

26,379 


6 32,085 

32,085 


69 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 

( s ) 

c 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

70 

1,267 

422 

845 

42 

17 

25 

34 

8 

43,170 


10,052 

19,189 

13,929 

42,904 

37,358 

5,546 

432,850 

126,050 

306,800 

71 

1,021 

556 

465 

46 

25 

21 

38 

8 

6 23,487 

1,979 

247 

17,108 

4,153 

6 23,511 

22,086 

1,425 

6 82,500 

82,500 


72 

668 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

3 

1 

2 

3 


1,872 



38 

1,834 

1,729 

1,729 


18,000 

18,000 


73 

2,166 

1,035 

1,131 

81 

37 

44 

78 

3 

39,410 


24,071 

6,844 

8,495 

50,263 

31,988 

18,275 

266,477 

118,639 

147,838 

74 

263 

116 

147 

18 

3 

15 

4 

14 

17,473 

7,000 


6,926 

3,547 

12,281 

12,281 


10,000 

10,000 


75 

576 

276 

300 

33 

11 

22 

29 

4 

34 558 

100 

3,000 

31,45S 


33,076 

31,576 

1,500 


76 

176 

83 

93 

12 

7 

5 

3 

9 

12,241 

6,000 

6,241 


12,241 

12,241 


21,500 

21,500 


77 

911 

372 

539 

27 

8 

19 

22 

5 

35,741 

1,184 

22,357 

12,200 

32,308 

31,918 

390 

370,975 

105,000 

265,975 

78 

365 

191 

174 

10 

3 

7 

6 

4 

9,205 

1,000 

1,856 

6,017 

332 

9,709 

7,709 

2,000 

19,485 

i ,885 

11,600 

79 

44 

21 

23 

16 

8 

8 

16 


7,000 



7,000 


5,900 

5,500 

400 

23,000 

15,000 

8,000 

80 

236 

* 71 

165 

4 

1 

3 

3 

i 

6 29,590 

1,206 

1,531 

5,604 

21,249 

( 2 ) 

6 11,166 

( 2 ) 

6 39,249 

18,000 

21,249 

81 

1 318 

439 

879 

52 

12 

40 

50 

2 

65,553 


1,246 

60,653 

3,654 

64,212 

04,212 


( 2 ) 

86,882 

( 2 ) 

82 

369 

171 

198 

11 

7 

4 

11 


12,036 


2,864 

8,519 

653 

13,493 

13,493 


76,752 

59,800 

16,952 

83 

K4Q 

442 

407 

795 

421 

374 

725 

70 

2?5, 720 

260,999 

11,501 

3,220 

260,658 

167,500 

93,158 

825,394 

825,394 

84 

430 

179 

251 

27 

17 

10 

25 

2 

16,417 

2,500 

13,697 

220 

14,216 

10,475 

3,741 

75,500 

70,000 

5,500 

85 

355 

141 

214 

13 

s 

S 

10 

3 

20,304 

3,000 

803 

10,692 

5,809 

20,304 

19,405 

899 

2,000,000 

1,000,000 

1,000,000 

86 

07Q 

191 

1 zo 

11 

5 

G 

11 


7 507 


1,149 

6,358 


7,519 

7,328 

191 




87 

£ i o 

70 


Qft 

90 

q 

11 

19 

1 

12 808 

7,700 

4,871 

237 


37,436 

12,823 

24,613 

30,000 

30,000 


88 

2,002 

**1 

856 

1,146 

65 

27 

38 

45 

20 

60,705 

11,270 

33,049 

16,386 

56,024 

52,803 

3,221 

701,751 

365,977 

335,774 

89 

1 41 

141 


3 

3 


3 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


90 

528 

226 

302 

24 

9 

15 

19 

5 

23,722 

1,200 

3,207 

9,631 

9,684 

22,327 

22,327 

261,550 

105,922 

155,628 

91 

369 

100 

269 

16 

4 

12 

15 

1 

13,624 

300 

2,392 

8,982 

1,950 

13,836 

13,836 


65,301 

26,399 

38,902 

92 

1,749 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

61 

26 

35 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

79,523 


18,305 

55,912 

5,306 

71,458 

71,266 

198 

383,639 

269,465 

114,174 

93 

754 

( 2 ) 

i 2 ) 

33 


33 

33 


27,800 

I 


5,478 

18,899 

3,423 

24,368 

24,36^ 


125,176 

75,000 

50,176 

94 


4 Enlisted men, Hospital Corps. 5 Opened November, 1910; statistics for about 2 months. 6 Includes report of dispensary. 






































































































































































298 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table IV.— HOSPITALS AND 







*-< 

a 

1 

9 

U 


MEDICAL STAFF 
AT CLOSE OF 

NURSES at close 
OF YEAR. 

& 






CO 

CO 

■s 

© 

«M 

YEAR. 




a 

a 

a 

NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of cases treated. 

•d 

© 

o . 

rG CO 

o 

cn co 

•i-d 

C3 

p<-£ 







o 

•i-i 




O 

«*-< 


o 

© 

u 

© 

eO 


g 

bi 

.9 



© 

m 




c3 

1 


a 

cJ 

o 

'm 

© 

Vj 

C3 

o 

©’ 

13 

a 

© 

fl 





fH 

o 

£ 

e 


> 

Eh 

3 



MASSACHUSETTS—Continued. 














Northampton: 







19 



24 



95 

Cooley Dickinson Hospital 

Private corporation. 

General... 

1884 

Yes. 

Yes. 

80 


19 


24 

Locust St. 











Peabody: 







10 


* 

12 


12 

96 

Josiah B. Thomas Hospital... 

Private organization_ 

General__ 

1907 

Yes. 

Yes. 

31 


10 


King St. 











Pittsfield: 










50 



97 

House of Mercy Hospital. . 

Private corporation... 

General.. 

1874 

Yes. 

Yes. 

130 

25 

2 

23 


50 

North St." 






1 



98 

Springside Sanatorium.., 

Private individual. 

Tubercular. 

1906 

No. 

No. 

12 

6 


6 


1 

31 Springside Ave. 











Plymouth: 










10 



99 

Jordan Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious. 

1901 

Yes. 

Yes. 

22 

15 


15 


10 

Sandwich St. 










Quincy: 







16 



15 


15 

100 

Citv Hospital of Quincy. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1889 

Yes. 

Yes. 

40 


16 


* Whit well St. 










Rockport: 













101 

Leander M. Haskin’s Hospital_ 

Summit. 

Private organization. 

General. 

1906 

No. 

Yes. 

10 

7 

5 

2 

1 


1 










Rutland: 













102 

Rutland State Sanatorium.. 

State of Massachusetts.... 

Pulmonary tubercular.... 

1895 

Yes. 

Yes. 

350 

4 

4 


28 


28 

Salem: 









103 

Contagious Hospital. 

City of Salem. 

Contagious. 

1905 

No. 

Yes. 

35 

0 ) 

2 


0 ) 

2 

4 

1 

3 

104 

Salem Dav Camp 2 ._•. 

Committee for Prevention of 

Tubercular. 

1908 

No. 

No. 


2 


2 

Fort Lee Road. 

Tuberculosis. 






* 



105 

Salem Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1873 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

19 

2 

17 

28 

2 

26 

31 Charter St. 









Sharon: 













106 

Sharon Sanatorium * . 

Private corporation. 

Incipient tubercular. 

1891 

No. 

Yes. 

24 

2 

1 

1 

2 


2 

Everett St. 




t 





Somerville: 












107 

City Hospital for Contagious 
Diseases. 

City of Somerville. 

Contagious. 

1906 

Yes. 

Yes. 

80 

1 


1 

10 


10 

Private corporation. 

General. 

24 


24 

22 


108 

1323 Broadway. 

Somerville Hospital. 

1891 

Yes. 

Yes. 

40 

22 

Crocker St.* 






South Framingham: 













109 

Framingham Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1893 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

22 

8 

14 

45 


45 

9 Evergreen St. 





Springfield: 













110 

Mercy Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1896 

Yes. 

Yes. 

150 

33 

3 

30 

40 


40 

233 Carew St. 





111 

Springfield Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1869 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

29 

3 

26 

43 


43 

Chestnut St. 




112 

Tuberculosis Day Camp. 

Springfield Association for 
Prevention of Tubercu- 

Tubercular. 

1908 

No. 

Yes. 

23 

6 


6 

1 


1 

613J Main St". 








losis. 












113 

U. S. Armv Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1878 

( 5 ) 

Yes. 

7 

1 


1 

1 

«1 


Springfield Armory. 









114 

Wesson Maternity Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

Maternity. 

1906 

Yes. 

Yes. 

40 

(*) 


0 ) 

25 


25 

120 High St. ' 





115 

Wesson Memorial Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious 
and maternity. 

1900 

Yes. 

Yes. 

65 

21 


21 

43 


43 

132 High St. 





Swampscott: 












116 

Tuberculosis Dav Camp 7 . 

Lynn Tuberculosis Associa¬ 
tion. 

Tubercular. 

1908 

No. 

Yes. 

9 

1 


1 

1 


1 

Taunton: 














117 

Morton Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1888 

Yes. 

Yes. 

25 

18 


18 

12 


12 

88 Washington St. 






Vineyard Haven: 













118 

U. S. Marine Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1879 

No. 

Yes. 

24 

1 

1 


2 

2 


Waltham: 







119 

Waltham Babv Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1900 

No. 

Yes. 

20 

9 


9 

9 


9 

Rear of 751 Main St. 




120 

Waltham Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1885 

No. 

Yes. 

110 

20 

2 

18 

26 


26 

Hope Ave? 






Westfield: 













121 

Noble Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1893 

Yes. 

Yes. 

52 

9 


9 

14 


14 

West Silver St. 





122 

Westfield State Sanatorium. 

State of Massachusetts. 

Pulmonary tubercular. 

1910 

No. 

Yes. 

160 

3 

3 


10 

2 

8 

Woburn: 







123 

Choate Memorial Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except alcoholic 
and contagious. 

1908 

Yes. 

Yes. 

18 

18 

12 

6 

io 


10 

42 W arren Ave. 




Worcester: 













124 

City Hospital. 

City of Worcester. 

General. 

1871 

Yes. 

Yes. 

285 

62 

12 

50 

115 

8 

107 

Jaques Ave. 



125 

Memorial Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1871 

Yes. 

Yes. 

150 

28 

5 

23 

56 


56 

Belmont S't., Station A. 




126 

St. Vincent’s Hospital. 

Sisters of Providence. 

General. 

1893 

Yes. 

Yes. 

113 

32 

3 

29 

32 


32 

73 Vernon St.' 





127 

Worcester Hahnemann Hospital.. 
281 Lincoln St. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1895 

Yes. 

Yes. 

25 

13 


13 

12 


12 





128 

Worcester Isolation Hospital. 

City of Worcester. 

Contagious. 

1896 

No. 

Yes. 

75 

5 

1 


12 


12 

Belmont St. 



l 



% 


1 Not reported. 

2 Open May 1-Oct. 1,1910; statistics for 6 months. 

3 Buildings and equipment. 


* Women. 

5 Instruction for Hospital Corps. 
8 Enlisted men, Hospital Corps. 




















































































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


299 


SANITARIUMS: 1910—Continued. 


PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING YEAR. 

PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 


RECEIPTS DURING 

YEAR. 


Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Adults 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

Total. 

Derived from— 

Appro¬ 

pria¬ 

tions. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
patients. 

Other 

sources. 

813 

313 

500 

40 

19 

21 

33 

7 

$23,063 

$670 

$1,930 

$17,349 

$3,114 

319 

164 

155 

9 

5 

4 

8 

1 

27,717 

7,500 


10,428 

9,789 

1,447 

666 

781 

89 

44 

45 

73 

16 

152,807 


108,847 

33,039 

10,921 

23 

5 

18 

6 

3 

3 

6 


o 

(*> 

0) 

4,900 

0) 

255 

105 

150 

15 

6 

9 

14 

1 

10,842 


4,698 

6,144 


386 

212 

174 

15 

11 

4 

12 

3 

21,093 

4,000 

3,171 

6,658 

7,264 

91 

31 

60 

5 

3 

2 

5 


4,201 

580 

235 

2,232 

1,154 

758 

402 

356 

343 

175 

168 

343 


184,000 

184,000 




88 

43 

45 

8 

4 

4 

1 

7 

4,001 

3,754 


247 


36 

18 

18 






4,395 

'300 

4,095 



1,017 

480 

537 

38 

18 

20 

31 

7 

43,398 


308 

19,611 

23,479 

45 


45 

22 


22 

22 


23,920 


5,466 

8,563 

9,891 

186 

86 

100 

28 

16 

12 

6 

22 

7,985 

7,985 

565 

248 

317 

25 

9 

16 

21 

4 

24,111 

8,108 

3,501 

11,602 

900 

698 

247 

451 

27 

10 

17 

26 

1 

32,365 


7,734 

18,014 

6,617 

2 671 

1 409 

1 262 

109 

63 

46 

100 

9 

58,836 


6,245 

52,591 


2,132 

1,027 

1,105 

66 

39 

27 

61 

5 

66,930 


1,727 

57,113 

8,090 

109 

59 

50 

22 

11 

11 

18 

4 

4,685 


4,278 

357 

50 

2 

2 







0) 

0) 


(i) 


427 


427 

15 


15 

15 


26,091 


15,667 

10,424 

833 

348 

485 

34 

11 

23 

32 

2 

42,293 


30 

30,056 

12,207 

35 

15 

20 






5,128 

428 

2,200 


2,500 

509 

257 

252 

14 

7 

7 

12 

2 

20,066 

1,366 

9,134 

9,345 

221 

8 91 

91 


10 

10 


10 


11,341 

11,341 




66 

37 

29 

5 

1 

4 


5 

2,907 

1,527 

1,039 

341 

881 

351 

530 

52 

20 

32 

36 

16 

44,973 

1,000 

2,439 

28,262 

13,272 

494 

251 

243 

24 

12 

12 

22 

2 

21,479 

2,000 

6,107 

12,090 

1,282 

Q71 

909 

169 

158 

78 

80 

158 


94,300 

80,986 


12,996 

318 

273 

127 

146 

12 

6 

6 

10 

2 

11,340 

1,959 

9,295 

86 

4,630 

2,704 

1,926 

184 

105 

79 

153 

31 

9 132,549 

60,000 


56,025 

16,524 

2,293 

610 

1,683 

86 

22 

64 

53 

33 

9 131,223 


71,729 

36,349 

23,145 

2,244 

1,076 

1,168 

55 

25 

30 

49 

6 

io 67,971 


10,064 

43,503 

14,404 

1 90 

40 

cq 

q 

2 

7 

9 


7,515 



7,215 

300 

447 

212 

235 

34 

13 

21 

5 

29 

27,168 

21,838 


5,330 



Total. 


0 ) 

$20,776 

147,143 

4,270 

10,767 

19,983 

4,274 

197,259 

7,381 

2,652 

43,994 

22,070 

16,963 

25,094 

31,874 

58,683 

77,569 

929 

0 ) 

26,500 

44,678 

2,727 

12,517 

11,341 

3,397 

42,843 

21,676 
77,744 
14,374 

123,762 

9 78,661 

10 67,867 

7,095 

26,027; 


rs DURING YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. II 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

$31,069 

(>) 

$169,402 

$121,000 

$48,402 

95 

19,650 

$1,126 

190,874 

86,902 

103,972 

96 

58,043 

89,100 

504,674 

250,000 

254,674 

97 

4,139 

131 

9,000 

8,000 

1,000 

98 

10,767 


31,569 

31,369 

. 200 

99 

19,983 


122,015 

50,000 

72,015 

100 

4,274 


12,484 

10,000 

2,484 

101 

187,963 

9,296 

522,210 

522,210 


102 

6,581 

800 

30,000 

30,000 


103 

1,963 

689 

8 2,537 

3 1,537 

1,000 

104 

43,663 

331 

610,934 

252,883 

358,051 

105 

22,070 


85,000 

40,000 

45,000 

106 

8,966 

7,997 

39,188 

39,188 


107 

25,094 


84,812 

62,437 

22,375 

108 

31,874 


84,306 

70,000 

14,306 

109 

54,634 

4,049 

183,300 

183,300 


110 

67,501 

10,068 

368,054 

250,000 

118,054 

111 

929 


2,000 

2,000 


112 

0) 

C 1 ) 

( i ) 

0) 


113 

26,500 


415,000 

200,000 

215,000 

114 

44,678 


1,018,082 

510,500 

507,582 

115 

2,137 

590 




116 

12,308 

209 

103,700 

65,000 

38,700 

117 

0) 

0) 

60,000 

60,000 


118 

3,235 

162 

14,022 

6,000 

C, 022 

119 

41,897 

946 

310,215 

136,406 

173,809 

120 

20,583 

1,093 

80,250 

80,000 

250 

121 

74,694 

3,050 

109,027 

109,027 


122 

9,309 

5,065 

47,984 

47,687 

297 

123 

123,762 


(>) 

725,806 

(>) 

124 

68,598 

10,063 

9 816,487 

398,182 

418,305 

125 

62,708 

5,159 

io 143,400 

143,400 


126 

7,095 


57,500 

50,000 

7,500 

127 

26,027 


99,641 

99,641 


128 





^ Open 206 days; statistics for about seven months. 
8 Exclusive of out-patients. 


9 Includes report of dispensary. 

10 Includes report of St. Vincent's Home. 











































































































































300 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 


Table IV. — HOSPITALS AND 







O 

1 

© 


MEDICAL STAFF 

NURSES AT CLOSE 









AT CLOSE 

YEAR. 

OF 

OF 

YEAR. 

£ 






CO 






a 

c 

e 

NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of cases treated. 

© 

o . 

.Cl GO 
© © 

60 CO 

S 

S_j 

•g © 

CO 

P..S 

© 

© 

& 

o 







.2 




1 

£ 

© 

© 

Ui 

© 

& 


© 

.5 



©* 

*cS 

CO 

S3 

HH 




j- 

c3 

a> 

r* 

*23 

s_ 

H 

'c 

O 

a 

z 

03 

O 

Eh 

© 

> 

c3 

■4-» 

o 

Eh 

© 

’cS 

S 

a 

© 


MICHIGAN. 














Amasa: 










i 



1 

Amasa Hospital 1 . 

Verona Mining Co. 

General. 

1900 

No. 

No. 

4 

i 

i 



i 

Ann Arbor: 





( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

44 

4 

40 

2 

Homeopathic Hospital. 

University of Michigan. 

General. 

1878 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

13 


Washtenaw and University 









Aves. 










14 


8 

3 

Psychopathic Hospital. 

University of Michigan. 

Psychopathic and incipient 
insane. 

1901 

Yes. 

Yes. 

43 

3 

3 


6 

’ Catherine St. 



34 



84 

6 

78 

4 

University Hospital. 

University of Michigan. 

General. 

1869 

Yes. 

Yes. 

250 

34 



Catherine St. 











Battle Creek: 










13 


12 

5 

Nicholas Memorial Hospital.. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

18S9 

Yes. 

Yes. 

46 

13 


13 

1 


162 Van Buren St. 











Bay City: 







18 






6 

Bay Citv Hospital.. 


General, except contagious.. 

1906 

Yes. 

Yes. 

16 

18 


7 


7 

913 Cass Ave. 



( 2 ) 


27 


25 


Mercy Hospital. 

Sisters of Mercv. 

General. 

1S99 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

2 


Fifteenth St. 








Benton Harbor: 












10 

8 

Mercv Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

G eneral. 

1S99 

Yes. 

Yes. 

27 

20 


20 

10 


Bessemer: 






1 


9 

Gogebic Hospital. 

Private organization. 

General. 

1885 

No. 

Yes. 

12 

3 

3 


2 

1 


Big Rapids: 








13 

10 

Mercy Hospital. 

Sisters of Mercy. 

General, except smallpox ... 

1879 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

8 

15 

2 

Calumet: 





8 

11 

Calumet arid Hecla Hospital 4 .... 

Calumet and Hecla Mining 
Co. 

General... 

1866 

Yes. 

No. 

25 

9 

9 


10 

2 

129 Calumet Ave. 







12 

Tamarack Hospital 1 . 

Tamarack and Osceola Con- 

G eneral. 

1890 

No. 

Yes. 

15 

8 

1 

7 

3 


3 

Tamarack Mine. 

solidated Mining Co. 







Champion: 












13 

Champion Hospital 1 . 

Oliver Iron Mining Co. 

Emergency. 

( 2 ) 

No. 

Yes. 

6 

1 

1 


1 

1 


Beacon P. O. 








Detroit: 













14 

Arnold Hospital for Incurables_ 

706 Fort St., west. 

Private corporation. 

Incurable. 

1900 

No. 

No. 

45 

2 


2 

5 


5 









IS 

Children s Free Hospital.. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1886 

No. 

Yes. 

95 

17 

2 

15 

12 


12 

Antoine and Farnsworth Sts. 




16 

City Tuberculosis Sanitorium.... 

City of Detroit. 

Tubercular. 

1906 

No. 

Yes. 

75 

3 

1 

2 

7 


7 

" Trov Ave. 








17 

18 

Grace Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1888 


Yes. 

150 

30 

8 

22 

68 

8 

60 

Harper Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

G eneral. 

1S59 

Yes. 

Yes. 

250 

83 

15 

68 

80 


80 

500 John R. St. 




19 

Mercy Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

Maternity. 

1876 

No. 

No. 

14 

5 

1 

4 

1 


1 

439 Lafavette Boulevard. 














20 

Providence Hospital. 

Sisters of Chari tv. 

Genera!. 

1869 

Yes. 

Yes. 

350 

55 

1 

54 

32 

2 

30 

Grand Boulevard and Four- 






teenth Ave. 













21 

St. Mary's Hospital. 

Sisters of Charity. 

General. 

1845 

No. 

Yes. 

180 

36 

6 

30 

50 


50 

242 "St. Antoine St. 





22 

Smallpox Hospital. 

City of Detroit.... 

Smallpox. 

1S94 

No. 

Yes. 

15 

1 


1 

3 

1 

2 

Schmittdiel Ave. 







23 

Solvay General Hospital. 

Solvay Process Co. 

General. 

1^02 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

4 

2 

2 

14 

12 

2 

Detroit St. 







24 

U. S. Armv Post Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

( 2 ) 

( 8 ) 

Yes. 

26 

2 

2 


10 

2 10 


Fort W ayne. 







25 

U. S. Marine Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1855 

No. 

Yes. 

50 

5 

5 


3 

3 


1142 Jefferson‘Ave. 









26 

Van Leuven Browne Hospital 
School. 

31 Kenilworth. 

Private corporation. 

Crippled children. 

1907 

No. 

No. 

25 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

10 

10 

7 

3 





27 

Woman’s Hospital and Infants’ 
Home. 

Private corporation. 

Obstetrical. 

1869 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

12 

2 

10 

21 


21 






Poorest Ave. and Beaubien St. 














Escanaba: 













28 

Delta County Hospital. 

Hospital Sisters of St. Fran¬ 
cis. 

General. 

1883 

No. 

Yes. 

52 

10 

3 

7 

11 


11 

1018 Fannie St. 






Flint: 













29 

Contagious Disease Hospital. 

City of Flint. 

Smallpox. 

1910 

No. 

Yes. 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


9 

1 

1 

East Kearslev St. 







30 

Hurley Hospital. 

Private organization. 

General. 

1907 

Yes. 

Yes. 

35 

63 


63 

14 


14 

Begole St. 






Ford: 













31 

Emergency Hospital. 

Michigan Alkali Co. 

General, except contagious.. 

1900 

No. 

Yes. 

38 

3 

1 

2 

5 

2 

3 

Wyandotte P. O. 








Grand Rapids: 













32 

' Butterworth Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except infectious... 

1S89 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

26 

1 

25 

45 


45 

Michigan Ave. 



33 

Grand Rapids Isolation Hospital.. 
North Fuller St. 

City of Grand Rapids. 

Smallpox, scarlet fever, and 
diphtheria.. 

1888 

No. 

Yes. 

75 




6 


6 








34 

Kent County Detention Hospital.. 
Ionia St . and Crescent Ave. 

County of Kent. 

Mental and alcoholic. 

1905 

No. 

Yes. 

15 

3 


3 

3 

i 

2 








35 

Municipal Tuberculosis Sanato¬ 
rium. 

City of Grand Rapids. 

Pulmonary tubercular. 

1907 

No. 

Yes. 

74 

i 


i 

5 


5 









North Fuller St. 













38 


Sisters of Mercy. 

General, except contagious.. 

1893 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

25 


25 

20 

2 

18 

145 South Lafayette St. 




37 

Union Benevolent Association 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1847 

Yes. 

Yes. 

70 

37 

2 

35 

35 


35 

Hospital. 





Lvon St. and College Ave. 














Hancock: 













38 

Detention Hospital. 

County of Houghton. 

Smallpox.. 

1900 

No. 

Yes. 

50 

1 


1 

2 

1 

I 

39 

St. Joseph’s Hospital. 

Sisters of St. Joseph. 

General. 

1899 

No. 

l r es. 

50 

8 


8 

15 

i 

14 

Water St. 






1 Employees. * Employees and their families. 

2 Not reported. 5 Includes report of Arnold Home for Old Ladies. 

3 Includes finances of Mother House of the Sisters of Mercy. «Includes report of Children’s Free Hospital Clinic. 

















































































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


301 


SANITARIUMS: 1910—Continued. 


TS DURING YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. » 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

(*> 

( 2 > 

$1,000 

$1,000 


1 

$36,000 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


2 

27,102 


77,889 

77,889 


3 

77,624 


325,554 

325,554 


4 

19,214 

$1,364 

30,000 

30,000 


5 

7,694 


13,241 

13,241 


6 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

(*) 

7 

9,824 

466 

35,000 

35,000 


8 

( 2 ) 


10,000 

10,000 


9 

318,393 

3 430 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


10 

56,755 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


11 

8,336 


13,013 

13,013 


12 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


13 

17,150 

5,323 

5 31,600 

31,600 


14 

18,705 

1,907 

8 425,000 

125,000 

$300,000 

15 

40,000 

5,000 

7 35,000 

35,000 


16 

106,087 

79,000 

570,000 

250,000 

320,000 

17 

180,442 

8,334 

650,000 

200,000 

450,000 

18 

1,200 

3,000 

25,000 

20 , 000 

5,000 

19 

m 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 

(>) 

( 2 ) 

20 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 




21 





2,000 


10,000 

10,000 


22 

18,500 

1,500 

30,000 

30,000 


23 

m 

( s ) 

(») 

( 2 ) 


24 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 


25 

( 2 ) 

4,190 

10,000 

10,000 


26 

29,452 


176,810 

100,000 

76,810 

27 

13,765 

c«) 

(*) 

27,000 

(*) 

28 

461 

391 

3,836 

3,836 


29 

25,726 

1,999 

111,934 

86,395 

25,539 

30 

10,812 

53 

ii 2,520 

ii 2,520 


31 

42,110 


161,750 

150,000 

11,750 

32 

12,131 

408 

37,844 

37,844 


33 

3,500 

( 2 > 

10,000 

10,000 


34 

19,543 

1,009 

33,556 

33,556 


35 

15,000 

3,400 

100,000 

100,000 


36 

38,519 


147,590 

107,484 

40,106 

37 

« 

( 2 ) 

10,000 

10,000 

. 

38 

7,500 

. 

75,000 

75,000 

. 

39 





PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING YEAR. 


PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 


RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 


Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Adults 

Chil¬ 

dren. 









(*) 

( a > 

(») 

(*) 

(») 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

(«) 

181 

91 

90 

43 

21 

22 

43 


4,856 

2,490 

2,366 

250 

130 

120 

219 

31 

669 

294 

375 

19 

5 

14 

18 

1 

274 

119 

155 

6 

4 

2 

5 

1 

910 

275 

635 

35 

22 

13 

32 

3 

226 

82 

144 

11 

3 

8 

11 


5,000 

3,000 

2,000 

5 

4 

1 

5 


350 

135 

215 

21 

11 

10 

17 

4 

74,018 

( 2 ) 

(*) 

16 

6 

10 

15 

1 

126 

87 

39 

2 


2 

2 


2 

2 







74 

43 

31 

42 

25 

17 

42 


958 

492 

466 

66 

33 

33 


66 

262 

(») 

( 2 ) 

75 

37 

38 

68 

7 

3,163 

1,453 

1,710 

103 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

94 

9 

4,380 

1,981 

2,399 

186 

71 

115 

162 

24 

40 


40 

10 


10 

10 


635 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

1S4 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

80 

104 

4,345 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

165 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

(») 

( 2 ) 

33 

23 

10 






549 

463 

86 

29 

24 

5 

26 

3 

378 

378 


13 

13 


13 


1032 O 

320 


20 

20 


20 


84 

37 

47 

25 

10 

15 


25 

656 


656 

49 


49 

49 


548 

448 

• 

100 

23 

19 

4 

23 


34 

18 

16 

11 

7 

4 

8 

3 

751 

380 

371 

23 

12 

11 

23 


181 

158 

23 

6 

6 


6 


1,431 

643 

788 

60 

31 

29 

55 

5 

202 

89 

113 

6 


6 

3 

3 

175 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

76 

55 

21 

21 

15 

6 

21 


701 

360 

341 

50 

28 

22 

45 

5 

1,042 

402 

640 

44 

12 

32 

39 

5 

304 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

10 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

464 

394 

70 

20 

10 

10 

15 

5 


Total. 


( 2 ) 

$25,000 

29,517 

88,034 

16,305 

7,889 

( 2 ) 

8,995 

( 2 ) 

3 18,823 
51,694 
8,336 

( 2 ) 

5 22,842 

8 19,614 

7 40,000 

185,443 
182,735 

4.500 

( 2 ) 

75,727 

2,000 

20,000 

( 2 ) 
24,030 
8,753 

31,988 

15,356 

852 
55,496 

12,682 

44,643 
9, 244 

3.500 
17,939 

18,400 
63,752 


( 2 ) 
7,500 


Derived from- 


Appro- 

pria- 

tions. 


$25,000 

10,000 

2,000 


1,000 


40,000 

7,025 


415 


2,000 


24,030 


874 

852 

9,000 


8,237 
1,000 
17,213 

2,200 


( 2 ) 


500 


Dona¬ 

tions. 


$750 

100 

1,525 

575 


3 1,062 
47,317 


1,397 


79,000 


1,927 

( 2 ) 


300 


4,357 

4,736 

7,166 


26,995 
1,200 
4,705 


4,200 

3,406 


2,000 


Care of 
patients. 


( 2 ) 


$19,051 
75,792 

15,555 

7,258 

( 2 ) 

6,620 


3 7,489 
4,377 
2,855 


11,039 

4,916 


60,646 

169,694 

4,500 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


19,700 

( 2 ) 


1,423 

21,076 

7,316 


18,367 

1,423 

38,117 
1,007 
2,500 
570 

12,000 

43,746 


5,000 


Other 

sources. 


$466 
10,242 


531 

( 2 ) 

800 

( 2 ) 

3 10,271 


5,481 

( 2 ) 

10,406 

14,698 


38,772 
13,041 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


2,973 
6,176 


1,134 
10,059 
1,821 


156 


16,600 


Total. 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

$27,102 
77,624 

20,578 

7,694 

( 2 ) 

10,290 

( 2 ) 

3 18,823 
56,755 
8,336 

( 2 ) 

5 22,473 


185,087 
188,776 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

24, 

( 2 ) 

29,452 

i 

( 2 ) 


10,865 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


7 Includes report of dispensary. 

8 Instruction for Hospital Corps. 


s Enlisted men, Hospital Corps. 
w Exclusive of out-patients. 


u Equipment. 


























































































































































































302 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table IV.— HOSPITALS AND 







t-i 

o 

£ 


MEDICAL STAFF 

nurses at close 









AT CLOSE 

OF 

OF 

YEAR. 

1 






CO 


YEAR. 




a 

3 

G 

NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of cases treated. 

o 

o . 

CO 

o © 

CO CO 
§ 

a 

oo 

© 

& 







.2 

G 




O 

fcUD ^ 

1 

O 

TJ 

© 

u 

© 


-M 

© 

.a 



© 

*c3 

CO 

G 

HH 




u> 

CO 

© 

.a 

C0 

H 

£ 

'o 

o 

a 

3 

Z 

+3 

O 

H 

•G5 

8 

-•—I 

> 

c3 

+3 

o 

ai 

a 

a 

© 


MICHIGAN—Continued. 














Howell: 








1 





40 

State Sanatorium for Tuberculosis. 

State of Michigan. 

Incipient pulmonary tuber¬ 
cular. 

1905 

Yes. 

No. 

80 

i 


5 


5 













Ironwood: 













41 

Union Hospital _ 


General. 

1886 

No. 

Yes. 

30 

3 

3 


4 

2 

2 

606 East Ayer St. 












Ishpeming: 













42 

Ishpeming Hospital 2 .. 

TJ. S. Steel, and other steel 

General. 

1872 

No. 

No. 

25 

5 

5 


3 

2 

1 

"318 South I>ine St. 

and mining companies. 











Jackson: 






26 

i 

25 

14 


14 

43 

Jackson City Hospital.. 

City of Jackson... 

General. 

1890 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 


Ganson and Seymour Sts. 












Kalamazoo: 







70 


70 

20 


20 

44 

Bronson Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1901 

Yes. 

Yes. 

45 



Cedar and John Sts. 




11 


10 




45 

Tuberculosis Tent Colony 

City of Kalamazoo.. 

Tubercular. 

1907 

No. 

No. 

10 

i 

1 


1 

2207 Gull St. 











Lake Linden: 










6 


6 

46 

Lake Superior General Hospital... 
Calumet St. 

Private organization. 

General, except contagious 
and insane. 

1895 

Yes. 

Yes. 

30 

4 

2 

2 












Lansing: 







24 


24 

15 


15 

47 


Woman’s Hospital Associa¬ 
tion. 

General, except contagious.. 

1896 

Yes. 

Yes. 

30 



429 Cedar St., north. 








Laurium: 







50 


50 

10 


9 

48 

Calumet Public Hospital. 

Private corporation.... 

General. 

1908 

Yes. 

No. 

25 


1 

300 Florida St. ‘ 










Marquette: 












6 

49 

St. Luke’s Hospital ... 

Private corporation _ 

General, except contagious.. 

1895 

Yes. 

Yes. 

28 

7 

7 


7 

1 

123 West R'idge St. 





17 


16 

50 


Hospital Sisters of St. Fran¬ 
cis. 

General, except venereal_ 

1890 

No. 

Yes. 

95 

4 


4 

1 

Fifth and Wisher Sts. 








Menominee: 









9 

16 


15 

51 

St. Joseph’s Hospital. 

Hospital Sisters of St. Fran¬ 
cis. 

General. 

1893 

No. 

Yes. 

65 

9 


1 

802 Ogden Ave. 









Muskegon: 









30 

26 

1 

25 

52 

Hacklev Hospital. 

First Congregational Church 

General. 

1904 

Yes. 

Yes. 

60 

32 

2 

Forest Ave. 



(>) 

15 


14 

53 

Mercy Hospital. 

Sisters of Mercv... 

General. 

1903 

Yes. 

Yes. 

42 

0) 


1 

269 Jefferson St. 








Norway: 










0) 

(>) 

(0 

54 

Columbia Hospital and Training 
School. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1894 

0) 

0) 

0) 

( J ) 

(>) 

0) 




Main St. and Summit Ave. 













55 

Penn Argon Hospital 2 . 

Pennsylvania and Oliver 
Iron Mining Companies. 

General. 

1902 

No. 

Yes. 

9 

3 

1 

2 

2 


2 

411 Iron St. 









Petoskey: 








(1) 




56 

Lockwood Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 
General, except contagious.. 

1902 


Yes. 

18 

(>) 

20 


7 


7 

57 

Petoskey Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

1908 

Yes. 

Yes. 

30 


20 

5 


5 

424 Emmet St. 









Port Huron: 










14 


14 

58 

Port Huron Hospital 

Private corporation. 

General, except alcoholic, 
contagious, and insane. 

1880 

Yes. 

Yes. 

36 

25 


25 


1010 Richardson St. 








Republic: 











1 

59 

Republic Mine Hospital 2 . 

Republic Iron Co. 

General. 

1883 

No. 

No. 

12 

4 

2 

2 

2 

1 

‘ Hospital St. 










Saginaw: 




• 








1 

60 

Detention Hospital. 

City of Saginaw. 

Smallpox. 

1908 

No. 

Yes. 

24 

0) 


0) 

2 

1 

Weiss and‘Bond Sts. 




17 


17 

61 

Saginaw General Hospital 

Private corporation.. 

General. 

1887 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

10 


10 


“ Houghten Ave. and Harrison 
St. 

St. Mary’s Hospital. 








62 

Sisters of Charity... 

General. 

1874 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

15 


15 

28 

1 

27 

830 South Jefferson Ave. 





11 


11 

63 

Woman’s Hospital. 

Private corporation.. 

General. 

1888 

Yes. 

Yes. 

20 

13 


13 


1413 Janes Ave. 









Sault Ste. Marie: 










10 


10 

64 



General, except contagious.. 

1903 

Yes. 

Yes. 

34 

20 


20 


Spruce St. and Bingham Ave. 






65 


1 . S. Government. 

General. 

1892 

( 3 ) 

Yes. 

16 

2 

2 


4 4 

4 


Fort Brady. 










White Cloud: 












3 

66 

White Cloud Hospital and Sanita¬ 
rium. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1900 

Yes. 

No. 

24 

16 

8 

8 

6 

3 









MINNESOTA. 














Alexandria: 









0) 

0) 

0) 

(0 

1 

St. Luke’s Hospital. 

0). 

(i). 

0) 

0) 

(*) 

(>) 

0) 

0) 

Austin: 







0) 

12 




2 

St. Olaf Hospital. 

Private corporation.. 

General, except contagious.. 

1896 

Yes. 

Yes. 

35 

0) 

7 


7 


916 Lansing Ave. 






Bemidji: 













3 

St. Anthony’s Hospital. 

Sisters of St. Benedict. 

General.. 

1899 

No. 

Yes. 

78 

7 

7 


10 

3 

7 


Biwabik: 









4 

Biwabik Hospital. 

Private individual. 

General. 

1892 

No. 

No. 

18 

3 

3 


2 

1 

1 


Brainerd: 







19 


5 

Northern Pacific Hospital 2 . 

Northern Pacific Beneficial 

General. 

1882 

Yes. 

Yes. 

80 

5 

5 


22 

3 



' Association. 





0) 


(’) 

6 

Northwestern Hospital... 

Private organization.. 

General, except contagious.. 

1909 

Yes. 

Yes. 

(■) 

2 

2 




304 North Eighth St. 






7 

St. Joseph’s Hospital. 

Sisters of St. Benedict. 

Surgical. 

1902 

No. 

Yes. 

35 

12 

8 

4 

7 

1 

6 


Third St. and Bluff Ave. 








Breckenridge : 












20 

8 

St. Francis Hospital. 

Franciscan Sisters of the 

in. 

1898 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

3 


3 

20 



Immaculate Conception. 








1 Not reported. 2 Employees and their families. instruction for Hospital Corps. 


























































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


303 


SANITARIUMS: 1910—Continued. 


PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING YEAR. 

PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE 

OF YEAR. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Adults 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

234 

107 

127 

52 

32 

20 

52 


350 

300 

50 

14 

10 

4 

14 


110 

109 

1 






656 

316 

340 

29 

13 

16 

29 


630 

223 

407 

30 

8 

22 

21 

9 

18 

8 

10 

2 

1 

1 

2 


89 

40 

49 

4 

2 

2 

4 


551 

231 

320 

25 

7 

18 

22 

3 

270 

125 

145 

8 

2 

6 

7 

1 

412 

232 

180 

13 

8 

5 

13 


781 

498 

283 

41 

32 

9 

35 

6 

616 

351 

265 

17 

14 

3 

16 

1 

640 

234 

406 

45 

22 

23 

36 

9 

566 

173 

393 

20 

(*) 

0) 

0) 

(*) 

P) 

( i ) 

(») 

P) 

(*) 

P) 

P) 

P) 

56 

20 

36 

3 

3 


3 


241 

140 

101 

17 

8 

9 

15 

2 

227 

120 

107 

15 

10 

5 

12 

3 

465 

176 

289 

s 

5 

3 

8 


52 

50 

2 

4 

4 


4 


100 

50 

50 






619 

314 

305 

18 

8 

10 

15 

3 

980 

380 

606 

65 

30 

35 

64 

1 

456 


456 

9 


9 

9 


414 

295 

119 

12 

9 

3 

12 


221 

221 


3 

3 


3 


175 

100 

75 

11 

8 

3 

10 

1 

P) 

o 

0) 

P) 

p> 

(>) 

P) 

o) 

358 

169 

189 

14 

6 

8 

12 

2 

1,138 

998 

140 

105 

55 

50 

75 

30 

80 

74 

6 

3 

2 

1 

2 

1 

1,118 

1,060 

58 

54 

53 

1 

54 


P) 

p> 

( i ) 

C 1 ) 

( i ) 

(■) 

(*) 

( i ) 

508 

233 

275 

11 

4 

7 

10 

1 

400 

(*) 

(») 

0) 

c) 

C l ) 

p> 

P) 


RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 


Total. 


Derived from- 


Appro- 

pria- 

tions. 


$45,415 

0) 

0) 

28,221 

27,628 
3,380 

3,951 

14,153 

11,228 

10,389 

18.991 

16,283 

47,736 
15,586 

P) 

5,000 

6,014 

5.365 

14,311 

0 ) 

2,000 

27,255 

28.992 

| 

8.366 

12,044 

0 ) 

500 


P) 

4,260 

P) 

15,812 
6 304,579 

P) 

10,250 


$39,463 


P) 


15,850 

233 
2,740 

765 

2,850 

500 


2,837 
131 


P) 


Dona¬ 

tions. 


P) 

1,000 


1,058 

P) 


C 1 ) 


600 


P) 


$300 

7,578 

600 


302 

250 

91 

126 

74 


Care of 
patients. 


2,293 

P) 

3,000 


840 

365 


1,900 

P) 

1,000 

55 


80 

913 


P) 


60 


P) 


6 7,000 

C 1 ) 

250 

P) 


$4,439 
2,400 

P) 

12,071 

19,817 
40 

3,186 

10,641 

10,298 

10, 298 
12,515 

10,799 

16,222 
13,293 

P) 

2,000 

4,338 

5,000 

12,411 

( l ) 


Other 

sources. 


16,973 

28,992 
8,286 

8,467 

P) 

500 


0) 

4,200 

P) 

812 
& 5,154 

( l ) 

10,000 

P) 


$1,513 

P) 

P) 


360 

180 


3,513 

5,279 

31,514 


P) 


S30 


P) 


10,227 


1,606 


P) 


P) 


C 1 ) 


P) 


PAYMENTS DURING 

YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

$45,416 

$31,316 

$14,100 

$93,976 

$93.976 


(>) 

p> 

p) 

30,000 

30,000 


P) 

P) 

p> 

pj 

p) 

C 1 ) 

19.493 

19,493 


(i) 

0) 


23,217 

23,217 


64.000 

64,000 


3,380 

2, 740 

640 

1,000 

1,000 


3,018 

3,018 


25,000 

25,000 


12,305 * 

11,897 

408 

16,000 

16,000 


! 

10,423 

10,223 

200 

15,000 

15,000 


9,544 

9,544 


5,717 

5,717 


19,291 

16,839 

2,452 

69,500 

69,500 


13,889 

9,287 

4,602 

60,000 

60,000 


45,727 

39,227 

6,500 

855,000 

250,000 

$605,000 

15,383 

10,806 

4,577 

30,000 

30,000 


(») 

p) 

p> 

p) 

p) 

p> 

5,300 

5,000 

300 

p) 

10,000 

p) 

5,987 

5,387 

600 

16,922 

16,922 


5 300 

4,800 

500 




14 311 

14,311 


40.000 

40,000 


P) 

p) 

p> 

10,000 

10,000 


2,000 

2,000 


5,000 

5,000 


25,509 

23,518 

1,991 

177,720 

22,720 

155,000 

28,810 

18,810 

10,000 

40,500 

40,500 


8 255 

8,255 


6,000 

6,000 


11 471 

11 277 

194 


c) 

p) 

P) 

C 1 ) 

p) 


1,500 

1,000 

500 

26,000 

25,000 

1,000 

P) 

P) 

p) 

p> 

( i ) 

p) 

3 600 

3 600 


20,000 

20,000 


P) 

p) 


p) 

p) 




8 300 

8 000 

300 

20,000 

20,000 


& 275,223 

275,223 

455,070 

257,789 

197,281 

« 

p> 

( i ) 

( i ) 

p> 

p) 

P) 

7,20C 

p) 

50,000 

50,00C 

. 

0) 

p> 

p) 

p> 

p) 

p> 








a 

s 

d 

d 

.a 

s 

§ 


40 

41 

42 

43 

44 

45 

46 

47 

48 

49 

50 

51 

52 

53 

54 

55 


56 

57 


58 

59 

60 
61 

62 

63 

64 

65 

66 


1 

2 

3 

4 

6 

6 

7 


« Enlisted men, Hospital Corps. 


& Includes reports of Northern Pacific Hospitals at Missoula, Mont., and Tacoma, Wash. 



























































































































































































304 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table IV.— HOSPITALS AND 


Institution number. 

NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of cases treated. 

Year founded. 

Training school for 

nurses. 

Colored patients re¬ 

ceived. 

Number of beds. 

MEDICAL STAFF 
AT CLOSE OF 
YEAR. 

NURSES AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 

*3 

o 

d 

© 

S 

*a> 

© 

Ph 

si) 

.9 

3 

> 

'3 

O 

Eh 

.2 

*3 

a 

© 

’S 

9 

© 

fa 


MINNESOTA—Continued. 














Cloquet: 













9 

Cloquet Hospital. 

Private individuals. 

General. 

1905 

No. 

Yes. 

15 

3 

3 


2 


2 


Avenue D and Arch St. 














Crookston: 













10 

Bethesda Hospital. 

United Norwegian Luth- 

General, except tubercular.. 

1898 

Yes. 

Yes. 

28 

16 

10 

6 

6 


t 


Woodland* Ave. 

eran Church. “ 











11 

St. Vincent’s-Hospital. 

Sisters of St. Benedict. 

General. 

1900 

No. 

Yes. 

30 

0) 

( l ) 

C 1 ) 

0) 

( l ) 

( l ) 


Duluth: 







12 

Duluth Contagious Hospital. 

City of Duluth. 

Scarlet fever and diphtheria. 

1909 

No. 

Yes. 

50 

1 


1 

4 


4 


Fourteenth Ave., west, and 













Third St. 













13 

Duluth Isolation Hospital. 

City of Duluth. 

Smallpox, erysipelas, and 

1888 

No. 

Yes. 

50 

1 


1 

2 

i 

1 


Arlington Road. * 


measles! 











14 

St. Luke’s Hospital. 

Private corporation (Episco- 

General, except contagious.. 

18S2 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

25 


25 

26 


26 


901 East First St. 

pal). 











15 

St. Mary’s Hospital. 

Sisters of St. Benedict. 

General, except contagious.. 

1888 

Yes. 

Yes. 

200 

SO 

16 

64 

59 

3 

56 


Third St. and Fifth Ave., east. 













Eveleth: 













16 

Fabiola Hospital 4 . 

U. S. Steel Co. 

Emergency. 

1899 

No. 

Yes. 

20 

3 

3 


2 

1 

1 

Fergus Falls:* 













17 

St. Luke’s Hospital. 

United- Norwegian Luth- 

General. 

1903 

Yes. 

Yes. 

36 

10 

5 

5 

18 

9 

9 



eran Church. “ 












18 

Wright Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1905 

Yes. 

Yes. 

35 


4 

3 

12 


12 

Bismark Ave. and Cascade St. 














Fort Snelling: 













19 

U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General... . 

1820 

( 7 ) 

Yes. 

102 

1 

i 


8 7 

7 


Row G, No. 1. 













Fosston: 













20 

Fosston Hospital.. 

Private organization. 

General, except contagious.. 

0) 

No. 

Yes. 

9 

1 

i 


1 


1 

Gladstone: 











21 

Cuenca Sanatorium. 

St. Paul Anti-Tuberculosis 

Tubercular. 

1910 

No. 

Yes. 

20 

1 


1 

1 


1 

R. D. No. 2. 

Committee. 













Grand Marais: 













22 

Grand Marais Hospital. 

Private organization. 

General. 

1906 

No. 

Yes. 

20 

1 

i 


3 

2 

1 

Grand Rapids: 













23 

St. Benedict’s Hospital. 

Sisters of St. Benedict. 

General. 

1898 

No. 

Yes. 

50 

12 

5 


5 

2 

3 

Hibbing: 













24 

Hibbing Detention Hospital 9 . 

City of Hibbing. 

Contagious. 

1911 

No. 

Yes. 

20 







Little Falls: 













25 

St. Gabriel’s Hospital. 

Franciscan Sisters of the Im- 

General, except contagious.. 

1891 

No. 

Yes.’ 

50 

10 


10 

6 

1 

5 


maculate Conception. 












Madison: 













26 

Ebenezer Hospital. 

United Norwegian Luth- 

General, except contagious.. 

1902 

No. 

Yes. 

36 

i 1 ) 

(0 

4 

6 


6 


eran Church. * 










Mankato: 













27 

Immanuel Hospital. 

Lutheran Hospital Associa- 

General. 

1906 

Yes. 

Yes. 


20 


20 

23 


23 

Fourth antf Washington Sts. 

tion, Minnesota Synod. 












28 

St. Joseph’s Hospital. 

Sisters of the Sorrowful 

General. 

1898 

No. 

Yes. 

56 

26 


26 

22 


22 

Fifth and Washington Sts. 

Mother. 













Minneapolis: 













29 

Asbury and Rebecca Deaconess 

Methodist Deaconess Asso- 

General, except chronic, con- 

,1892 

Yes. 

Yes. 

101 

175 

63 

112 

id 43 


43 


Hospital. 

ciation. 

tagious, and incurable. 

> 











Ninth St. and Ninth Ave. 













30 

Hopewell Hospital 11 . 

City of Minneapolis. 

Tubercular. 

1908 

No. 

Yes. 

20 

1 


1 

3 


3 

*Camden Place. 













31 

Maternity Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

Obstetrical, and noncon- 

1886 

Yes. 

Yes. 

55 

9 

6 

3 

10 


10 

2201 Western Ave. 


tagious diseases of children. 











32 

Minneapolis City Hospital 13 . 

City of Minneapolis. 

General. 

1891 

Yes. 

Yes. 

225 

67 

8 

59 

47 


47 

Fifth St. and Seventh Ave., 













south. 













33 

Natural Cure Sanatorium. 

Private organization. 

Chronic, except mental and 

1910 

No. 

No. 

25 

1 

1 


2 


2 

3100 Hennepin Ave. 


tubercular. * 











34 

Northwestern Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1882 

Yes. 

Yes. 

90 

29 

3 

26 

33 


33 

2627 Chicago Ave. 













35 

Norwegian Deaconess Hospital h. . 

Norwegian Lutheran Free 

General. 

1889 

Yes. 

Yes. 

86 

22 

2 

20 

41 

1 

40 


2312 Fifteenth Ave., south. 

Church. 












36 

Quarantine Hospital. 

City of Minneapolis. 

Smallpox. 

1900 

No. 

Yes. 

20 

1 

1 


1 


1 

37 

St. Barnabas Hospital. 

Private corporation (Epis- 

General, except contagious.. 

1871 

Yes. 

Yes. 

90 

25 

4 

21 

40 


40 

Sixth St. and Eighth Ave., 

copal). 












south. 













38 

St. Mary’s Hospital. 

Sisters of St. Joseph. 

General, except contagious.. 

1889 

Yes. 

0) 

150 

0) 


(*) 

40 


40 

2500 South 'Sixth St. 







39 

Swedish Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1898 

Yes. 

Yes. 

150 

32 

4 

28 

44 

2 

42 

723 Tenth Ave., south. 









40 

Thomas Hospital. 

United Norwegian Luth- 

Advanced tubercular. 

1908 

No. 

Yes. 

50 

13 

1 

12 

9 


9 

Sixth SL and Twenty-fourth 

eran Church. “ 











Ave., south. 













41 

Universitv Hospital. 

University of Minnesota. 

General. 

1909 

Yes. 

Yes. 

60 

31 

3 

28 

19 


19 

Union and Essex Sts. 











Moorhead: 





— 








42 

Northwestern Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1908 

Yes. 

Yes. 

60 

c) 


0) 

15 


15 


New Ulm: 









43 

St. Alexander Hospital. 

Sisters, Poor Handmaids of 

General. 

1884 

No. 

No. 

75 

6 


6 

11 


11 



Jesus Christ. 













Owatonna: 













44 

Owatonna Citv Hospital. 

City of Owatonna. 

General. 

1900 

Yes. 

Yes. 

18 

8 


8 

3 


3 


828 South "Cedar’St. 














Perham: 













45 

St. James Hospital. 

Franciscan Sisters. 

General. 

1907 

No. 

No. 

30 

5 

1 

4 

8 


8 


Pine City: 











46 

Pokegama Sanatorium. 

Private organization. 

Pulmonary and throat. 

1905 

No. 

c i ) 

37 

2 

i 

i 

2 

i 

1 


1 Not reported. 

2 Exclusive of amount covered into city treasury. 
2 Covered into city treasury. 

4 Employees and their families. 


5 Exclusive of out-patients. 

6 Monthly deductions from wages of employees. 

7 Instruction for Hospital Corps. 

8 Enlisted men, Hospital Corps. 














































































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


305 


SANITARIUMS: 1910—Continued. 


PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING YEAR. 


PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 


Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Adults 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

263 

226 

37 

14 

13 

1 

0) 

0) 

259 

140 

119 

9 

7 

2 

9 


330 

159 

171 

23 

9 

14 

20 

3 

60 

40 

20 

12 

8 

4 


12 

120 

112 

8 

10 

8 

2 

2 


1,646 

988 

658 

85 

54 

31 

73 

12 

2,264 

0) 

« 

127 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

*45 

36 

9 

2 

1 

1 

(*) 

0) 

422 

241 

181 

26 

16 

10 

26 


366 

166 

200 

9 

6 

3 

9 


628 

616 

12 

3 

3 


3 


150 

75 

75 

7 

4 

3 

7 


62 

35 

27 

20 

10 

10 

20 


98 

96 

2 

21 

21 


21 


425 

400 

25 

45 

41 

4 

43 


211 

98 

113 

18 

10 

8 

18 


432 

203 

229 

7 

3 

4 

7 


689 

288 

401 

19 

( l ) 

0) 

0) 

( l > 

530 

241 

289 

31 

14 

17 

12 

1 

1,974 

787 

1,187 

35 

11 

24 

28 


44 

17 

27 

20 

1C 

1C 

2C 

. 

352 

0) 


55 

(») 

(>) 

22 

3 

2,979 

1,919 

1,060 

218 

133 

85 

215 


314 

209 

105 

18 

11 

7 

18 


1,765 

0) 

0) 

50 

21 

29 

35 

1 

826 

381 

445 

62 

(*) 

0) 

(*) 

0) 

176 

13f 

41 

3 

3 


3 


2,222 

1,045 

1,177 

72 

4C 

32 

64 


1,490 

( l ) 

( l ) 

103 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

2,482 

1,264 

1,218 

89 

39 

5C 

8C 


182 

85 

97 

50 

29 

21 

5C 

. 

383 

202 

181 

36 

19 

17 


3 

360 

20C 

160 

25 

lc 

1( 

19 


225 

125 

100 

48 

(') 

0) 

0) 

0) 

196 

8f 

110 

9 

c 

3 

9 

. 

350 

10C 

250 

20 

8 

12 

7 

1 

113 

65 

48 

15 

1 10 

5 

15 



RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 


Total. 


Derived from- 


$5,400 

5,398 
0) 
6,758 

2,003 

42,220 

73,000 

*12,250 

10,644 

8,402 

(') 

(») 

7,858 

3,300 

18,032 


(') 

8,410 

17.649 

8,880 

'<>65,092 

8,000 
i* 18,125 
>0 85,764 

15,775 

63,522 

73.559 

5.818 

64,866 

C) 

96,419 

24,479 

20,000 

15,250 
is 7,918 

7,389 

4,300 
23,526 


Appro¬ 

pria¬ 

tions. 


2 $5,152 
2,003 


(») 

( l ) 

2,030 


200 


8,000 

82,000 


5,800 

0) 


20,000 


670 

1,397 


Dona¬ 

tions. 


$28 


( l ) 


Care of 
patients. 


$400 

5,370 

( l ) 

a 1,606 


Other 

sources. 


$5,000 


0) 


2,056 

6,000 

*12,250 

787 

600 


( l ) 

5,417 


32 


0) 


50 

7,627 


37,087 

40,000 


9,857 

7,781 

0) 

0) 

411 

3,300 

6,000 


( l ) 

8,142 

17,649 

8,630 

56,414 


3,077 

27,000 


21 


0) 


12,000 

0) 

268 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 


Total. 


12 12,707 


10,300 

10,060 


5,242 

0) 

60 

3,349 


5,000 


300 


5,418 

3,764 

15.775 

49,042 

27,142 

18 

59,273 

0) 

95,391 

21,044 


10,250 
6,459 

5,977 

3,000 

23,526 


1,051 


4,180 

36,357 


0) 


351 

) 

968 

86 


$2,600 

5,505 

0) 

6,758 

% 

2,003 
46,538 
0) 

0) 
7,219 
6,028 

0) 

4,000 

20,601 

2,000 

10,558 


For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 


789 

15 

1,000 


$2,400 

5,505 

0) 
6,758 

1,803 

35,653 

61.236 

7,600 

6,980 

6,028 

0) 

0) 
7,858 

1,800 

10,558 


For 

perma¬ 

nent 


prove- 

ments. 


0) 

7,982 

18,795 
15,766 

io 62.989 

65,744 

17,675 

100,688 

10,127 

49,047! 

73,315 

5,800 
63,112 

0) 
96,138 

0) 

20,000 

15,250 
is 7,254 

6,634 

4,500 

21,731 


0) 
7,982 

(>) 
8,766 

62,505 

5,744 
5,772 
85,688 

9,640 

46,204 

24,281 

5,800 

50,483 

( l ) 
85,499 
21,900 

20,000 

10,150 

5,451 

6,634 

2,500 

21,731 


$200 


VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 


200 

10,885 

C 1 ) 


0) 


239 


( l ) 

0) 
12,743 

200 


(») 


(>) 

7.000 

484 

60,000 

11,903 

15,000 

487 

2,843 

49,034 


12,629 

( l ) 

10,639 

0) 


5,100 

1,803 


2,000 


Total. 


Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 


$5,000 

15,000 

0) 

30,000 

3,000 

179,884 

250.000 

<*> 
27,000 
30.000 

0) 

0 ) 

13,500 

800 
50,000 
(>) 

( l ) 

15,000 

( l ) 

50,000 

10 198,500 

75,000 
70,000 
10 425,000 

5,000 

0) 

116,000 

40,000 

215,367 

0) 
118,509 
120,000 

200.000 

65,000 
is 50,000 

25,000 

30,000 

38,190 


In¬ 

vested 

funds. 


$5,000 

15,000 

(») 

30,000 

3,000 

167,276 

250.000 

20,000 

27,000 

30,000 

0) 

4,500 

13.500 

800 

50.000 

12.500 

0) 

15,000 

120,000 

50,000 

192,000 

75,000 

70,000 

425,000 


$12,608 


(*) 

116,000 

40,000 

185,367 

(*) 

118,509 

120,000 

200,000 

65,000 

50,000 

25,000 

30.000 

38,190 


9 Not opened until 1911. 
in Includes report of dispensary. 

11 Tuberculosis department of Minneapolis City Hospital. 
1 * Exclusive of donations other than cash. 


13 For tuberculosis department, see Hopewell Hospital, 
u Statistics for five months, subsequent to change of quarters. 
18 Includes report of St. Alexander Old People’s Home. 


0) 


0) 


0) 


6,500 


5,000 

( l ) 


30,000 

0) 


10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 
21 

22 

23 

24 

25 

26 

27 

28 

29 * 

30 

31 

32 

33 

34 

35 

36 

37 

38 

39 

40 

41 

42 

43 

44 

45 

46 


44153 °— 14 - 


-20 
















































































































































































































306 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table IV.— HOSPITALS AND 







U. 

o 



MEDICAL STAFF 

NURSES AT CLOSE 









AT 

LLUSE 

OF 

OF YEAR. 

0) 








YEAK. 










o 









a 

g 

Cl 

NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of cases treated. 

'd 

a> 

T3 

o . 

o <£> 

“ a 

G 

C3 

© 

rQ 

V-H 







■*-> 

a 

1 

I—I 




G 

3 

8 

bJD G 

.5 

.3 

3 

M 

H 

o 

<D 

c 

C5 

'o 

O 

f-H 

5 

a 

3 

6 

*3 

O 

H 

G 

<E> 

•*> 

<D 

a 

3 

> 

c3 

O 

H 

*3 

s 

*3 

a 

a> 


MINNESOTA—Continued. 














Princeton: 


s 











47 

N orthwestern Hospital... 

Private organization. 

General. 

1900 

Yes. 

Yes. 

25 

5 

l 

4 

5 


5 

Red Wing: 




8 



8 


8 

48 

Red Wing Hospital.. 

Private corporation_ 

General, except contagious.. 

1896 

Yes. 

Yes. 

30 


8 


1176 Oak St. 






11 


11 

49 

St. John’s Hospital... 

German Lutheran Church... 

General. 

1903 

Yes. 

No. 

50 

15 

5 

10 


1407 West fourth St. 











Rochester: 










77 



50 

St. Mary’s Hospital. 

Sisters of St. Francis. 

Surgical. 

1889 

Yes. 

Yes. 

200 

89 

39 

50 

2 

75 

Zumbro St.* 










St. Cloud: 










18 


18 

51 

St. Raphael’s Hospital.. 

Sisters of St. Benedict. 

General. 

1885 

Yes. 

No. 

80 

14 


14 


Ninth Ave. and Fifth St., 









north. 














St. Paul: 













52 

Bethesda Hospital. 

Lutheran Augustana Synod. 

General. 

1880 

Yes. 

Yes. 

130 

18 

2 

16 

44 

3 

41 

Ninth and* Waconta Sts. 






53 

City and County Hospital 

City of St. Paul and County 
of Ramsev. 

General, except smallpox ... 

1872 

Yes. 

Yes. 

615 

64 

13 

51 

90 


90 

"Jefferson Ave. 


54 

Dale Street Infirmary. 

City of St. Paul._ 

Smallpox. 

1890 

No. 

Yes. 

50 

3 


3 

2 

1 

1 

Dale St. 









55 

Mound’s Park Sanitarium. 

Swedish Baptist churches... 

General except contagious.. 

1905 

Yes. 

0) 

80 

15 

5 

10 

33 


33 

210 Earl St. 



56 

St. Joseph’s Hospital. 

Sisters of St. Joseph. 

General. 

1854 

Yes. 

Yes. 

150 

33 

3 

30 

86 

1 

85 

Ninth and E*xchange Sts. 





57 

St. Luke’s Hospital... . 

Private corporation (Epis¬ 
copal). 

General, except contagious 
and insane. 

1855 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

40 

3 

37 

34 


34 

Sherman arid Smith Sts. 



58 

St. Paul German Hospital. 

German Lutheran Church... 

General. 

1907 

Yes. 

Yes. 

25 

11 

1 

10 

10 

1 

9 

225 Prescott St. 



59 

State Hospital for Indigent, Crip¬ 
pled, and Deformed Children.3 

State of Minnesota. 

Crippled and deformed. 

1910 

No. 

Yes. 

60 

2 


2 

1 


1 









1003 Ivy St. 














Springfield: 













60 

St. John’s Hospital. 

Private corporation (Luth¬ 
eran). 

General. 

1901 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

State Sanatorium: 

I 

Incipient tubercular. 












61 

State Sanatorium for Consump¬ 
tives. 

State of Minnesota. 

1908 

No. 

Yes. 

80 

7 

2 

5 

3 


3 










Stillwater: 













62 

Stillwater City Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1880 

Yes. 

Yes. 

25 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

10 

7 


7 

1007 Greeley St.* 







Tracy: 













63 

Sumer’s Hospital. 

Private organization. 

General, except contagious.. 

1905 

No. 

No. 

10 

3 


3 

3 

1 

2 

Two Harbors:* 







64 

Two Harbors Hospital. 

Private organization. 

General, except contagious.. 

1900 

No. 

No. 

15 

2 

2 


4 

1 

3 

820 Fifth Ave.* 








Wabasha: 













65 

St. Elizabeth’s Hospital. 

Sisters of the Sorrowful 

General, except contagious.. 

1898 

No. 

No. 

25 

2 


2 

7 

1 

6 

Walker: 

Mother. 













66 

Walker Hospital. 

Private organization. 

General. 

^J900 

No. 

Yes. 

35 

27 

5 

22 

3 

1 

2 

Warren: 






67 

Warren Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1905 

Yes. 

Yes. 

25 

6 

3 

3 

8 


8 

Hospital St. 







White Bear Lake: 













68 

Eva Shapiro Memorial Camp „ 

St. Paul Anti-Tuberculosis 

Anemic and predisposed 

1910 

No. 

Yes. 

20 

1 


1 

1 


1 


R. D. 2. 

Committee. 

tubercular. 












Winona: 













69 

Winona General Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1894 

Yes. 

Yes. 

52 

22 


22 

18 


18 

655 Indiana Ave.* 






MISSISSIPPI. 














Biloxi: 













1 

Charity Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except smallpox ... 

1908 

No. 

Yes. 

12 

7 


7 

2 


2 


404 Claiborne Ave. 









Greenville: 













2 

King’s Daughters’ Hospital. 

King’s Daughters. 

General, except contagious 
and incurable. 

1894 

Yes. 

No. 

16 

8 


8 

6 


6 









Greenwood: 













3 

King’s Daughters’ Hospital. 

King’s Daughters. 

General. 

1906 

Yes. 

No. 

12 

12 


12 

3 


3 


707 Front St. 








Gulfport: 













4 

King’s Daughters’ Hospital. 

King’s Daughters. 

General, except tubercular.. 

1906 

Yes. 

No. 

22 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

8 

1 

7 


Eleventh St. and Thirty-first 
Ave. 














Jackson: 













5 

Jackson Sanatorium. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1910 

Yes. 

Yes. 

45 

6 


6 

11 


ii 


117 Northwest St. 







Natchez: 













6 

Natchez Hospital. 

State of Mississippi, Adams 
County, and City of 

General. 

1884 

Yes. 

Yes. 

150 

6 

4 

2 

24 


24 








Natchez. 













Rosedale: 













7 

King’s Daughters’ Home. 

King’s Daughters. 

General, except contagious.. 

1900 

No. 

No. 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

2 

1 

l 


Vicksburg: 




8 

Confederate Veterans’ Hospital.... 
Jackson Road. 

United Daughters of the 
Confederacy. 

General. 

1901 

No. 

No. 

14 

12 


12 

i 

1 






9 

Mississippi State Charity Hospital. 
Jackson Road. 

State of Mississippi. 

General. 

1850 

Yes. 

Yes. 

175 

7 

7 


40 

20 

20 







10 

Vicksburg Infirmary. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

( 2 ) 

Yes. 

Yes. 

40 

12 

2 

10 

12 


12 

1022 Harrison St. 






1 Indeterminate. * Not reported. 3 Opened December, 1910. 


















































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


307 


SANITARIUMS: 1910—Continued. 


PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING YEAR. 

PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE 

OF YEAR. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Adults 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

401 

172 

229 

17 

7 

10 

14 

3 

245 

120 

125 

17 

5 

12 

14 

3 

594 

290 

304 

20 

11 

9 

18 

2 

5,457 

2,379 

3,078 

169 

77 

92 

167 

2 

616 

332 

284 

30 

12 

18 

18 

12 

1,246 

720 

526 

91 

53 

38 

85 

6 

5,530 

2,893 

2,637 

405 

240 

165 

330 

75 

170 

100 

70 

28 

16 

12 

20 

8 

505 

192 

313 

70 

27 

43 

65 

5 

2,843 

1,457 

1,386 

107 

45 

62 

103 

4 

1,668 

660 

1,008 

70 

28 

42 

65 

5 

347 

206 

141 

16 

7 

9 

16 


43 

27 

16 






( s ) 

( j ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

(») 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

228 

118 

110 

80 

45 

35 

80 


226 

146 

80 

12 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

< 2 > 

58 

42 

16 

10 

6 

4 

8 

2 

245 

210 

35 

11 

9 

2 

11 


192 

67 

125 

8 

3 

5 

7 

1 

240 

200 

40 

25 

15 

10 

25 


452 

240 

212 

19 

12 

7 

18 

1 

33 

17 

16 






748 

331 

417 

31 

15 

16 

29 

2 

78 

45 

33 

2 

2 


2 


386 

271 

115 

12 

8 

4 

11 

1 

137 

83 

54 

8 

6 

2 

4 

4 

268 

( s ) 

( s ) 

8 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

270 

100 

170 

20 

8 

12 

20 


5,440 

2,951 

2,489 

128 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 


( ! ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

39 

39 


14 

14 


14 


5, 700 

2, 700 

3,000 

196 

130 

66 

182 

14 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

24 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 


Total. 


$4,500 

12,099 

20,309 

146,257 

15,091 

69,631 
226,077 
10,000 
59,975 
( 2 ) 
81,614 
5,101 
( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

44,877 

9,035 

700 

14,800 

5,935 

8,000 

10,000 

4,360 

18,902 

2,151 
8,972 
5,400 
( 2 ) 

14,000 
32,728 

( 2 ) 

2,750 
34,000 
( 2 ) 


Derived from— 


Appro¬ 

pria¬ 

tions. 


$600 


184,981 

10,000 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 
25,000 
3,773 


620 

2,400 

2,900 

3,000 


32,380 

( 2 ) 

2,750 
34,000 
( 2 ) 


Dona¬ 

tions. 


$274 

832 


5,507 


( 2 ) 


270 

) 

122 

428 


( 2 ) 


4,360 


1,531 

452 


50 


348 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


Care of 
patients. 


$4,500 

8,325 

13,756 

146,257 

14,470 

41,311 

41,096 


59,705 

( 2 ) 
81,469 
4,673 
( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

19,877 

5,262 

700 

14,800 

5,935 

8,000 

10,000 


16,002 


6,120 
2,500 
( 2 ) 

14,000 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


Other 

sources. 


$2,900 

5,721 


621 


22,813 


23 


( 2 ) 


2,900 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 


Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

$4,500 

$3,900 

$600 

$10,000 

$10,000 

12,099 

9,344 

2,755 

62,000 

50,000 

17,309 

11,988 

5,321 

32,075 

32,075 

115,577 

103,413 

12,164 

325,000 

325,000 

14,742 

13,242 

1,500 

60,000 

60,000 

69,631 

40,929 

28,702 

195,000 

195,000 

184,981 

139,287 

45,694 

600,000 

600,000 

10,000 

10,000 


5,000 

5,000 

60,551 

53,869 

6,682 

122,134 

122,134 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 

81,614 

67,774 

13,840 

242,927 

242,927 

5,024 

4,787 

237 

35,000 

35,000 

( 2 ) 

c 2 ) 

< 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 > 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

60,083 

37,391 

22,692 

113,481 

113,481 

8,520 

8.270 

250 

12,500 

12,500 

700 

500 

200 

4,000 

4,000 

7,200 

7,200 


10.000 

10,000 

4,988 

3,588 

1,400 

30,000 

4 20,000 

4,800 

4,800 


15,000 

15,000 

10,000 

9,000 

1,000 

30,000 

30,000 

4,460 

1,310 

3,150 

4,000 

4,000 

18,319 

17,642 

677 

107,714 

42,714 

1,920 

1,525 

395 

2,500 

2,500 

8,732 

8,732 


30,000 

30,000 

3,600 

3,000 

600 

10,000 

10,000 

10,469 

6,875 

3,594 

15,000 

15,000 

14,000 

12,000 

2,000 

40,000 

40,000 

27,342 

26,690 

652 

95,000 

95,000 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

2,750 

2,750 


4,500 

4,500 

38,000 

30,000 

8,000 

100,000 

100,000 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 


In¬ 

vested 

funds. 


$12,000 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


10,000 


65,000 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


47 

48 

49 

50 

51 

52 

53 

54 

55 

56 

57 

58 

59 

60 
61 
62 

63 

64 

65 

66 

67 

68 
69 

1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 
10 


4 Buildings and equipment. 


& Children; open from August to November, 1910. 



























































































































































Institution number. 


308 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table IV.— HOSPITALS AND 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 


8 

9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 

21 

22 

23 

24 

25 

26 

27 

28 

29 

30 

31 

32 

33 

34 

35 

36 

37 

38 

39 


NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of cases treated. 

Year founded. 

Training school for 

nurses. 

Colored patients re¬ 

ceived. 

Number of beds. 

MEDICAL STAFF 
AT CLOSE OF 
YEAR. 

NURSES AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 

*3 

o 

a 

CO 

8 

.9 

4-» 

•rH 

.a 

> 

'3 

-4-» 

O 

© 

"3 

a 

<v 

*3 

a 

<X> 

pH 

MISSOURI. 













Cape Girardeau: 













St. Francis Hospital. 

Franciscan Sisters. 

General, except contagious.. 

1882 

No. 

Yes. 

35 

14 


14 

12 


12 

131 South Sprigg St. 













Chillicothe: 













St. Mary’s Hospital . 

Sisters of St. Mary.. 

General. 

1888 

No. 

No. 

40 

8 


8 

8 


8 

Columbia: ' 













Parker Memorial Hospital. 

University of Missouri.. 

General, except chronic and 

1901 

Yes. 

Yes. 

31 

0) 


( l ) 

11 


11 

South Sixth St. 


contagious. * 










Hannibal: 













Levering Hospital. 

Private organization. 

General. 

1902 

Yes. 

Yes. 

35 

20 


20 

16 


16 

Jefferson Barracks: 













U. S. Army Post Hospital . 

U. S. Government.. 

General. 

1823 

(*) 

Yes. 

100 

5 


5 

45 

8 45 


Jefferson City: 












St. Mary’s Hospital... 

Sisters of St. Mary. 

General. 

1904 

No. 

Yes. 

75 

12 


12 

15 


15 

Miller and Boliver Sts. 













Joplin: 

• 












St. John’s Hospital_ 

Sisters of Mercy_ 

General, except contagious.. 

1900 

Yes. 

Yes. 

21 

15 


15 

8 


8 

Twenty-second and Connor 












Aves. 













Kansas City: 













Baptist Hospital... 

Private corporation_ 

General, except contagious.. 

1908 

Yes. 

No. 

35 

38 

6 

32 

12 


12 

* Seventh*and Bennington Sts. 













German Hospital. 

Private corporation_ 

General, except contagious 

1885 

Yes. 

No. 

70 

9 

1 

8 

12 


12 

Twenty-third and Holmes Sts. 


and incurable. 











Homeopathic Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1899 

No. 

No. 

9 

5 


5 

3 

1 

2 

302i Olive St. * 













Kansas City General Hospital. 

Kansas City. 

General. 

1870 

Yes. 

Yes. 

500 

40 

21 

19 

55 

10 

45 

Twenty-second and Cherry Sts. 













Maternity Hospital. 

Sisters of Charity. 

Maternity. 

1899 

No. 

No. 

21 

0) 

(>) 

0) 

5 


5 

Twenty-third St. and College 










Ave. 













Mercy Hospital «. . 

Private corporation _ 

General . 

1897 

No. 

No. 

84 

7 

7 


10 


10 

414 Highland Ave. 













Missouri Pacific Railway Hospital 

Missouri Pacific Railwav 

General . 

1889 

No. 

No. 

36 

7 

3 

4 

5 

5 


706 West Tenth St." 

Co. 












Post Graduate Hospital.. 

Private corporation _ 

(i) . 

1907 

Yes. 

No. 

25 

0) 

0) 

0) 

6 


6 

918 Independence Ave. 










St. Joseph’s Hospital . 

Sisters of St. Joseph. 

Surgical . 

1875 

0) 

(■) 

(*) 

0) 

( l ) 

( l ) 

( l ) 

0) 

( l ) 

710 Penn St." 






St. Luke’s Hospital. 

Private corporation (Epis- 

General, except chronic and 

1906 

Yes. 

No. 

25 

17 


17 

12 


12 

Eleventh St. and Euclid Ave. 

copal). 

contagious. * 











St. Mary’s Hospital . 

Sisters of St. Mary _ 

General . 

1909 

Yes. 

Yes. 

160 

41 

1 

40 

34 

2 

32 

2800 Main St. 













Swedish Hospital _ 

Private corporation _ 

General, except contagious.. 

1906 

Yes. 

No. 

50 

24 

24 


25 


25 

Thirtieth and Wyandotte Sts. 












Maryville: 













St. Joseph’s Hospital_ 

Sisters of St. Francis _ 

General . 

1894 

No. 

Yes. 

50 

12 

12 


16 

1 

15 

606 East First St. 













Moberly: 













Wabash Employees’ Hospital.. 

Wabash Employees’ Hos- 

General . 

1884 

No. 

(«) 

60 

4 

1 

3 

0) 

(») 

( l ) 


pital Association. 


J 






Mount Vernon: 













Missouri State Sanatorium . 

State of Missouri . 

Tubercular . 

1907 

No. 

No. 

75 

4 

2 

2 

3 


3 

St. Charles: 













St. Joseph’s Hospital . 

Sisters of St. Mary . 

General . 

1885 

No. 

No. 

50 

10 


10 

8 


8 

Third and Clay Sts. 













St. Joseph: 













Emergency Hospital . 

City of St. Joseph . 

Smallpox . 

1870 

No. 

Yes. 

6 

0) 

2 

0) 

2 

1 

1 

Ensworth’Deaconess Hospital . 

Methodist Episcopal Church 

General, except contagious. . 

1898 

Yes. 

Yes. 

75 

32 


32 

34 

1 

33 

Seventh and Jule Sts. 













St. Joseph’s Hospital . 

Sisters of Charity . 

General, except contagious.. 

1869 

Yes. 

Yes. 

101 

0) 

1 

(‘) 

24 

3 

21 

923 Powell St. 










St. Louis: 













Alexian Brothers’ Hospital . 

Alexian Brothers . 

General . 

1866 

Yes. 

Yes. 

238 

18 

7 

11 

65 

65 


3933 South Broadway. 













American Hospital . 

American Medical College ... 

General, except contagious. . 

1905 

Yes. 

No. 

70 

10 

1 

9 

9 12 

1 

11 

3449 Pine St. 













Barnard Free Skin and Cancer 

Private corporation . 

Skin and cancer . 

1905 

No. 

Yes. 

42 

33 

1 

32 

10 

2 

8 

Hospital. 













Theresa and Washington Aves. 













Bethesda Incurable Hospital . 

Private corporation . 

General . 

1890 

Yes. 

0) 

67 

45 

2 

43 

35 

2 

33 

3649 Vista Ave. 












Evangelical Deaconess Home and 

Evangelical Deaconess Asso- 

General . 

1889 

Yes. 

No. 

90 

18 

1 

17 

38 

2 

36 

Hospital. 

ciation of St. Louis. 












4101 West Belle Place. 













Frisco Hospital 18 . 

Employees’ Hospital Asso- 

General . 

1899 

No. 

No. 

120 

18 

6 

12 

10 

3 

7 

4960 Laclede Ave. 

ciation of the Frisco Lines. 












Jefferson Hospital . 

St. Louis College of Physi- 

Surgical . 

1898 

Yes. 

No. 

23 

11 

1 

10 

6 


6 

2604 Gamble St. 

cians and Surgeons. 












Jewish Hospital . 

United Jewish Charities . 

General . 

1901 

Yes. 

No. 

90 

24 

2 

22 

40 


40 

5415 Delmar Boulevard. 












Lutheran Hospital. . 

Lutheran Hospital Associa- 

General . 

1853 

Yes. 

No. 

74 

23 

1 

22 

34 


34 

Ohio Ave.‘and Potomac St. 

tion. 












Missouri Baptist Sanitarium . 

Missouri Baptist Association. 

General . 

1890 

Yes. 

No. 

150 

18 

2 

16 

54 

2 

52 

919 North Taylor Ave. 












Missouri Pacific Railway Hospital 

Missouri Pacific Railway 

General . 

1884 

No. 

Yes. 

200 

20 

6 

14 

23 

13 

10 

1600 California Ave. 

Co. 












Mount St. Rose Hospital . 

Sisters of St. Mary . 

Tubercular . 

1902 

Yes. 

No. 

65 

14 

2 

12 

15 


15 

9100 South Broadway. 












Mullanphy Hospital . 

Sisters of Charity . 

General . 

1828 

Yes. 

Yes. 

150 

7 33 

2 

31 

7 34 

4 

30 

Montgomery St. and Grand 











Ave. 














1 Not reported. 5 Included in report of St. Anthony’s Home for Infants. 

! Instruction for Hospital Corps. 6 Children. 

3 Enlisted men, Hospital Corps. 7 Includes report of dispensary. 

* Includes report of Tuberculosis Dispensary. 8 Included in report of Wabash Employees’ Dispensary, Danville, Ill. 







































































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


309 


SANITARIUMS: 1910—Continued. 


PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING YEAR. 

PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 


RECEIPTS DURING 

YEAR. 


Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Adults 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

Total. 

Appro¬ 

pria¬ 

tions. 

Derived 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

from— 

Care of 
patients. 

Other 

sources. 

260 

127 

133 

12 

8 

4 

12 


$6,322 


$541 

$5,766 

$15 

175 

66 

109 

17 

10 

7 

16 

1 

3,666 


402 

2,777 

487 

690 

404 

286 

5 

3 

2 

5 


20,563 

$13,500 


7,063 


438 

0) 

0) 

20 

13 

7 

18 

2 

12,957 


12,857 

100 

1,634 

1,634 

44 

44 


44 


(!) 

o 


0) 


250 

122 

128 

(*) 

c) 

o) 

0) 

o 

o 

(■) 

o 

(>) 

280 

149 

131 

15 

9 

6 

15 


5,946 



5,672 

274 

225 

102 

123 

15 

5 

10 

13 

2 

7,109 



7,109 


832 

410 

422 

24 

(*) 

c) 

(■) 

(*) 

37,587 


1,321 

25,936 

10,330 

6 


6 

0) 

0 ) 

P) 

(■) 

(>) 

325 



325 










5,120 

3,218 

1,902 

314 

207 

107 

292 

22 

4 250,000 

250,000 




56 

56 

11 


11 

11 


( 5 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 5 ) 

( 6 ) 

500 

(!) 

0) 

34 

(J) 

(•) 


34 

15,181 

200 

4,436 

10,545 

624 

624 

28 

28 

28 


0) 

o 

(!) 

0) 

(■) 

246 

(!) 

0) 

12 

8 

4 

12 


5,574 

100 

5,474 

o) 

(■) 

(') 

0) 

( i ) 

0) 

c) 

c) 

o 

0) 

(■) 

( i ) 

0) 

287 

93 

194 

15 

5 

10 

11 

4 

17,335 


2,131 

12,376 

2,828 

1,420 

887 

533 

79 

49 

30 

73 

6 

52,170 


11,205 

36,093 

4,872 

835 

385 

450 

32 

16 

16 

29 

3 

37,266 


5,291 

31,625 

350 

275 

90 

185 

18 

8 

10 

18 


8,700 


143 

3,542 

5,015 

563 

563 


17 

17 


17 


( 8 ) 


(*) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

173 

93 

80 

75 

40 

35 

71 

4 

186 762 

177,598 

9,164 

286 

128 

108 

24 

10 

14 

24 


7,075 

1,340 

4,679 

1,056 

66 

56 

10 

4 

4 


4 


1,142 

1,142 

1,635 

705 

930 

39 

20 

19 

35 

4 

47,856 


1,406 

46,148 

302 

1,426 

0) 

0) 

58 

o 

o 

o 

o 

(*) 

c) 

<*) 

(*) 

(■) 

1 572 

1,572 


189 

189 


189 


7 67,966 



67,655 

311 

546 

277 

269 

18 

8 

10 

18 


9 12,656 



12,061 

595 

5 584 

2 792 

2 792 

39 

7 

32 

39 


16,155 


14,598 

1,557 

358 

52 

306 

60 

14 

46 

55 

5 

28,361 

2,072 

ii 26,289 

(!2) 

1,635 

683 

952 

82 

29 

53 

79 

3 

69,032 


7,211 

59,784 

2,037 

1 091 

1 091 


39 

39 


39 


7 , 14 50,669 


50,669 



230 

135 

Q5 

20 

12 

8 

20 


6,840 


6,840 


1,343 

653 

690 

51 

24 

27 

45 

6 

7 56,540 


550 

46,249 

9,741 

1 144 

457 

687 

47 

18 

29 

43 

4 

29,800 



29,100 

700 

1 9HQ 

504 

705 

120 

55 

65 

120 


78,137 


3,077 

75,060 



1 604 

181 

181 

181 


(!) 


(i) 


324 

168 

156 

55 

30 

25 

50 

5 

22, 201 


9,287 

5,734 

7,180 

1,372 

689 

683 

93 

51 

42 

87 

6 

7 54, 271 


1,512 

44,066 

8,693 




9 Includes report of American Medical College Dispensary. 

Includes reports of Bethesda Foundling Home and Bethesda Home for Old People, 
n Includes receipts from care of inmates. 


PAYMENTS DURING 

YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

| Institution number. 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

$6,150 

$4,520 

$1,630 

$40,000 

$40,000 


1 

3,618 

3,618 


10.000 

10,000 


2 

19,305 

13,571 

5,734 

51,000 

51,000 


3 

12,459 

12,459 


50,000 

45,000 

$5,000 

4 

(0 

o 

(>) 

<■) 

(■) 


5 

o 

o 

o) 

(■) 

(*) 

o 

6 

55,102 

5,102 

50,000 

85,000 

85,000 


7 

6,579 

6,329 

250 

12,500 

12,500 


8 

29,389 

24,302 

5,087 

82,179 

64,545 

17,634 

9 

0) 

c) 

<•) 

0) 

0) 

(*) 

10 

0) 

4 200,000 

(*) 

700,000 

700,000 


11 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

( s ) 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 


12 

12,639 

11,089 

1,550 

48,500 

48,500 


13 

18,275 

18,000 

275 

6,000 


6,000 

14 

5,657 

5,657 


7 25,000 

25,000 


15 

o 

(>) 

0) 

(*) 

(>) 

( i ) 

16 

21,002 

16,214 

4,788 

46,545 

42,295 

4,250 

17 

47,650 

22,634 

25,016 

175,000 

175,000 


18 

34,519 

26,519 

8,000 

56,426 

56,426 


19 

8,548 

7,332 

1,216 

75,000 

75,000 


20 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( s ) 

( 8 ) 

21 

186,762 

108,903 

77,859 

231,747 

231,747 


22 

6,830 

5,492 

1,338 

15,500 

15,500 


23 

1 142 

1.142 


5,239 

5,239 


24 

48,828 

47,555 

1,273 

28.; 100 

23,500 

4,600 

25 

(*) 

c) 

(*) 

(■) 

(*) 

(>) 

26 

7 68,565 

68,565 


7 350,000 

350,000 


27 

9 12 656 

12 656 


9 56,000 

56,000 


28 

16,310 

16,310 


229,145 

140,520 

88,625 

29 

10 28 361 

28 361 


89,225 

89,225 


30 

74,411 

52,607 

21,804 

160,000 

160,000 


31 

7 48,307 

48,307 


7 212,275 

186,062 

26,213 

32 

2,208 

2,208 


c) 

o 

(*) 

33 

60,769 

52,067 

8,702 

7 225,000 

225,000 


34 

31,352 

27,741 

3,611 

50,000 

50,000 


35 

63,290 

61,712 

1,578 

172,743 

172,743 


36 

99 120 

99 120 


81,793 

81,793 


37 

23,188 

12,988 

10,200 

103,000 

103,000 

. 

38 

7 57,631 

44,488 

13,143 

7 207,000 

207,000 

. 

39 


12 Included in donations. 

13 Employees. 

n Assessment of railway employees. 














































































































































































































310 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table IV.— HOSPITALS AND 







a 

1 

© 


MEDICAL STAFF 

NURSES AT CLOSE 









AT CLOSE 

or 

OF YEAR. 

JS 

a 

0 

0 





'o 

2 


YEAR. 





NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of cases treated. 

*6 

V 

'O 

o . 

43 co 

U 8 

M 

l-d 

&> 

•S 

© 











§ 

to 0 

<x> 

© 




txo 

.g 








£ 

S-t 

c3 

a 

'd 

© 

o 

© 

a 

*3 

0 

© 

2 

2 

© 

© 

a 

a 

frH 




© 



0 

O 

© 


0 

c3 

© 




in 

• e 

o 


e 

Pi 

> 


a 



MISSOURI—Continued. 














St. Louis—C ontinued. 













40 

Provident Hospital. 

Private organization. 

Surgical. 

1898 

Yes. 

Yes. 

26 

17 

14 

3 

6 

1 

5 

2824 Lawton Ave. 






41 

Rebekah Hospital. 

St. Louis University. 

General. 

1896 

Yes. 

No. 

71 

21 

1 

20 

20 


20 

3564 Caroline St. 





42 

43 

Robert Koch Hospital. 

City of St. Louis. 

Tubercular. 

1854 

No. 

Yes. 

140 

1 

1 


14 

4 

10 

St. Ann’s Maternity Hospital. 

Sisters of Charity. 

Obstetrical. 

1853 

Yes. 

No. 

75 

11 

1 

10 

12 


12 

5301 Page Boulevard.* 

St. Anthony’s Hospital. 

Franciscan Sisters. 

Surgical. 

0) 


44 

1878 

Yes. 

No. 

100 

1 

0) 

30 

30 

3520 Chippewa *St. 

St. John’s Hospital. 




45 

Sisters of Mercy. 

General. 

1S90 

Yes. 

No. 

73 

30 

2 

28 

35 

3 

32 

2228 Locust St. 






46 

St. Louis Baptist Hospital. 

St. Louis Baptist Associa¬ 
tion. 

General, except contagious.. 

1893 

Yes. 

No. 

65 

20 

2 

18 

19 


19 

2945 Franklin Ave*. 



47 

St. Louis Children’s Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1879 

Yes. 

No. 

104 

3 27 

4 

23 

2 18 


18 

400 South Jefferson Ave. 





48 

St. Louis City Hospital. 

City of St. Louis. 

General. 

1853 

Yes. 

Yes. 

600 

99 

43 

56 

55 

4 

51 

Fourteenth St.*and Lafayette 





Ave. 













49 

St. Louis Maternity Hospital. 

Private organization. 

Obstetrical. 

1908 

Yes. 

No. 

30 

26 

2 

24 

6 


6 

2621 Locust St.* 






50 

St. Luke’s Hospital. 

Private corporation (Episco¬ 
pal). 

General. 

1865 

Yes. 

No. 

104 

32 

2 

30 

44 

4 

40 

5501 Delmar Boulevard. 




51 

St. Mary’s Infirmary... 

Sisters of St. Mary. 

General. 

1877 

Yes. 

No. 

160 

29 

4 

25 

32 

2 

30 

1536 Papin St. 





52 

U. S. Marine Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1885 

No. 

Yes. 

59 

2 

2 


3 

3 


3640 Marine A*ve. 









53 

Washington University Hospital.. 

Washington University. 

General, except chronic and 

1904 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

59 

4 

55 

31 


31 


611 North Jefferson Ave. 


contagious. 












Sedalla: 












54 

City Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1892 

0) 

0) 

0) 

(>) 

(») 

0) 

0) 

(») 

(0 

640 East Thirteenth St. 



55 

Missouri, Kansas and Texas Rail- 

Missouri, Kansas & Texas 

General. 

1889 

No. 

Yes. 

190 

7 

4 

3 

23 

9 

14 

way Hospital. 5 

Railway Co. 






Broadway and Hancock Ave. 














Springfield: 













56 

Frisco Hospital 5 . 

Employees’ Hospital Asso¬ 
ciation of the Frisco Lines. 

General. 

1899 

No. 

No. 

120 

8 

3 

5 

10 

6 

4 






57 

St. John’s Hospital. 

Sisters of Mercy. 

General. 

1891 

Yes. 

No. 

40 

15 


15 

11 

2 

9 

Main and Nichols Sts. 






MONTANA. 














Anaconda: 













1 

St. Ann’s Hospital. 

Sisters of Charity. 

General, except contagious.. 

1888 

No. 

Yes. 

60 

3 3 


3 

3 16 

2 

14 


Sixth and*Oak Sts. 






Billings: 













2 

St. Vincent’s Hospital. 

Sisters of Charity. 

General. 

1899 

No. 

Yes. 

37 




10 

2 

8 


Division St. 









Butte: 













3 

County Pest House. 

County of Silver Bow. 

Smallpox. 

,1897 

No. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

30 

130 

1 


1 

2 

1 

2 


4 

St. James Hospital. 

Sisters" of Charity. 

Accident and gynecological..’ 

1881 

15 

5 

10 

22 

20 


Idaho and'Silver Sts. 





Deer Lodge: 













5 

St. Joseph’s Hospital. 

Sisters of Charity. 

General. 

1873 

No. 

Yes. 

48 

3 


3 

10 

2 

8 


Dixon St. 








Fort Benton: 













6 

St. Clare Hospital. 

Sisters of Charity of Provi¬ 
dence. 

General. 

1886 

No. 

Yes. 

45 

3 

1 

2 

9 

1 

8 


Great Falls: 




7 

Columbus Hospital. 

Sisters of Charity of Provi¬ 
dence. 

General. 

1892 

Yes. 

Yes. 

210 

19 


19 

19 

Q 

16 


Third Ave. and Sixteenth St. 




8 

Montana Deaconess Hospital. 

Methodist Deaconess Asso- 

General, except contagious.. 

1902 

Yes. 

Yes. 

70 

(>) 


0) 

23 


23 

Sixth Ave. north, and Elev- 

ciation. 




enth St. 














Helena: 













9 

St. John’s Hospital. 

Sisters of Charity. 

General. 

1872 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

8 


8 

24 

1 

23 

Between Ewing and Warren 






Sts. 













10 

St. Peter’s Hospital. 

St. Peter’s Episcopal Church 

General,except contagious.. 

1880 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

18 


18 

9 

l 

8 

35 Eleventh Ave. 


11 

U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1895 

( 9 ) 

Yes. 

24 

2 

2 


1 

101 


Fort William Henry Harrison. 








Missoula: 













12 

Northern Pacific Hospital 5 . 

Northern Pacific Beneficial 

General. 

1882 

No. 

Yes. 


5 

5 


12 

8 



Association. 







13 

St. Patrick’s Hospital. 

Sisters of Charity of Provi¬ 
dence. 

General. 

1873 

Yes. 

Yes. 

130 

30 


30 

21 


15 

Pine and Owen Sts. 




14 

U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

0) 

( 9 ) 

Yes. 

18 

1 

1 


(10) 

(10) 


Fort Missoula. 






Red Lodge: 













15 

Carbon County Hospital and Sani¬ 
tarium. 

Private individual. 

General,except contagious.. 

1905 

Yes. 

No. 

25 

4 

2 

2 


1 









Billings Ave. and Ninth St. 














Walkerville: 













16 

Alice Hospital 5 . 

Anaconda Copper Mining 

General. 

1880 

No. 

No. 

2 

1 


1 




NEBRASKA. 

Co. 








Beatrice: 













1 

United Brethren Hospital. 

Private organization. 

(i). 

1S99 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 


(*) 

(»> 

0) 

0) 

Blair: 



2 

Blair Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1905 

No. 

Yes. 

11 

6 


6 

2 


2 


1 Not reported. 4 Exclusive of out-patients. 

2 Included in report of St. Ann’s Widows’ Home. 5 Employees. 

3 Includes report of dispensary. « Exclusive of 5,000 treated at Emergency Station, Denison, Tex 































































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


311 


SANITARIUMS: 1910—Continued. 


PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING YEAR. 

PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE 

OF YEAR. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Adults 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

180 

84 

96 

13 

6 

7 

12 

1 

620 

222 

398 

50 

0) 

( i ) 

47 

3 

442 

319 

123 

135 

89 

46 

113 

22 

328 


328' 

27 


27 

27 


1,293 

431 

862 

56 

18 

38 

54 

2 

1,060 

430 

630 

45 

0) 

<») 

0) 

(») 

803 

385 

418 

50 

27 

23 

50 


950 

550 

400 

75 

44 

31 


75 

11,027 

8,370 

2,657 

453 

407 

46 

0) 

0) 

136 


136 

19 


19 

19 


1,084 

366 

718 

60 

25 

35 

60 


1,813 

1,255 

558 

124 

90 

34 

121 

3 

« 268 

268 


30 

30 


30 


1,148 

0) 

(*) 

40 

17 

23 

40 


0) 

( i > 

0) 

0) 

0) 

(>) 

0) 

0) 

® 4,3 52 

4,337 

15 

67 

67 


67 


1,100 

1,100 


54 

54 


54 


380 

165 

215 

20 

9 

11 

20 


564 

484 

80 

35 

26 

9 

35 


421 

260 

161 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

78 

75 

3 

4 

4 


4 


1,300 

870 

430 

31 

24 

7 

31 


303 

251 

52 

21 

18 

3 

21 


196 

94 

102 

11 

7 

4 

11 


1,623 

803 

820 

73 

53 

20 

64 

9 

1,358 

723 

635 

48 

22 

26 

38 

10 

/ 

365 

294 

71 

45 

29 

16 

35 

10 

550 

325 

225 

32 

19 

13 

25 

7 

442 

442 


6 

6 


6 


953 

920 

33 

36 

36 


36 


1,281 

981 

300 

80 

(») 

0) 

0) 

(*) 

220 

220 


1 

1 


1 


11,000 

6,000 

5,000 

17 

13 

4 

16 

1 

15 

15 







0 

<»> 

(>) 

0) 

(*) 

(•) 

<*) 

(>) 

44 

20 

24 

2 

1 

1 

2 



RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 


Total. 


$3,665 

0) 

28,677 

( 2 ) 

0) 

3 31,223 
31,237 
3 28,852 
180, 229 

8,025 
67,649 
47,191 
18,772 
38,000 

0) 

7 96,510 

3.850,669 
17,210 


3 30,889 
0) 


7,607 
0) 


0) 

10,780 

0) 

39,513 

9,320 

19,774 

0 ) 

<“) 

20,347 

0) 

15,000 

152 


0 ) 
1,369 


Derived from— 


Appro¬ 

pria¬ 

tions. 


$28,677 


179,992 


18,772 


0) 


650 


7,607 


0) 

6,800 

0) 


0) 


2,849 

0) 


0) 


Dona¬ 

tions. 


7 Includes report of Emergency Station, Denison, Tex. 

8 Assessments of railway employees. 

9 Instruction for Hospital Corps. 


$530 


( 2 ) 


700 
3,369 
8,641 


4,346 
1,170 
5,852 


0) 


50,669 
393 


25 


100 


Care of 
patients. 


« 
5,028 


703 


(“) 


53 


152 


0) 


110 


$2,880 
0) 


( 2 ) 

0) 
30,523 
27,468 


2,802 
59,454 
24,888 


18,000 

( l ) 


13,710 

3,500 
0) 


0) 

0) 

3,400 
0) 
28,312 

9,320 

14,496 
0) 

( u ) 

17, 445 
0) 

15,000 


Other 

sources. 


$255 
0) 


( 2 ) 

0) 


400 
20,211 
237 

877 
7,025 
16,451 


20,000 

0) 

7 96,510 


3,107 

26,739 
0) 


0) 

(0 


580 


6,173 


4,575 


( ll ) 


0) 
1,259 


0) 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 


Total. 


$3,922 

0) 

25,708 

( 2 ) 

0) 

3 30,367 

29,535 

3 33,727 

176,295 

7,136 
63,177 
45,827 
18,772 
38,000 

0) 

92,824 

3 48,307 
16,270 


3 31,591 
0) 


7,607 
0) 


For 

running 
ex¬ 
penses. 


0) 

10,200 

0) 
39,624 

12,630 

147,912 
0) 

(“) 

19,156 

0) 
15,000 

139 

0) 
1,492 


$3,922 

0) 

25,708 

( 2 ) 

0) 

30,367 
26,961 
33,727 
0) 

0) 

61,185 
45,827 

0) 
36,000 

( l ) 

92,824 

37,307 
15,270 


31,591 
0) 


7,607 

o) 


(») 

7,200 
0) 

24,624 

0) 

21,912 
0) 

( u ) 

19,156 

0) 
15,000 

139 


0) 
1,492 


For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 


0) 


0) 


$2,574 


0) 

0) 
1,992 


0) 

2,000 

0) 


11,000 

1,000 


0) 


0) 

0) 

3,000 

0) 
15,000 

0) 

126,000 
C 1 ) 


0) 


0) 


VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 


Total. 


$3,950 
0) 

125,000 

( 2 ) 

0) 

3 125,000 

85,003 

3104,174 

2,600,000 


578,134 
75,000 
0) 


0) 

110,000 

3 78,990 
50,000 


3 100,000 
0) 


5,000 

150.000 


0) 

35,800 
0) 
100,000 

75,000 

225,000 
0) 

( u ) 
77,949 
0) 

50,000 

13 2,500 

0) 


Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 


$3,950 

0) 

125,000 

( 2 ) 

0) 

125,000 

85,003 

45,315 

2,600,000 


In¬ 

vested 

funds. 


0) 


$.58,859 


438,889 

75,000 

0) 


139,245 


0) 


78,990 

50,000 


100,000 
0) 


5.000 

(4 


(>) 

35,800 

0) 

100,000 

75,000 

200,000 
( l ) 

( u > 
77,949 
0) 

50,000 

13 2,500 

0) 


0) 

110,000 


0) 


0 ) 

0 ) 


40 

41 

42 

43 

44 

45 

46 

47 

48 

49 

50 

51 

52 

53 

54 

55 

56 

57 


6 

7 

8 


25.000 


<“) 


0) 


10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

1 

2 


10 Enlisted men, Hospital Corps. 

u Included in report of Northern Pacific Hospital, Brainerd, Minn. 
12 Buildings and equipment. 








































































































































































































Institution number. 


312 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table IV.—HOSPITALS AND 


4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 
21 
22 

23 


NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of cases treated. 

Year founded. 

Training school for 

nurses. 

Colored patients re¬ 

ceived. 

Number of beds. 

MEDICAL STAFF 
AT CLOSE OF 
YEAR. 

NURSES AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 

'3 

O 

•*-> 

0 

© 

V, 

\n 

© 

Ph 

tub 

.3 

> 

O 

© 

s 

© 

a 

© 

NEBRASKA—Continued. 













Broken Bow: 













Broken Bow City Hospital 1 . 

Private organization. 

General. 

1898 

No. 

Yes. 

6 

4 

1 

3 

2 


2 

802 Ninth Ave. 













College View: 














Seventh Hay Adventists 

General, except tubercular.. 

1S94 

Yes. 

No. 

65 

2 

2 


38 

7 

31 

Columbus: 













St. Mary’s Hospital_ . 

Sisters of St. Francis_ 

General, except contagious.. 

1884 

No. 

Yes. 

100 

10 


10 

22 


22 

Fifteenth St. 












David City: 















General, except contagious.. 

1900 

Yes. 

Yes. 

25 

4 


4 

4 


4 

Fort Crook: 












U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1S94 

( 3 ) 

Yes. 

40 

2 

2 


( 4 ) 

U) 


Fort Robinson: 












U. S. Army Post Hospital_ 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

(*> 

( 3 ) 

Yes. 

43 

1 

1 


12 

4 12 

. 

Grand Island: 











St. Fran ei s Hospi tal. 

Sisters of St. Francis.. 

General, except contagious 

1886 

No. 

Yes. 

72 

12 


12 

11 


11 



and insane. * 











Kearney: 















General, except contagious.. 

1893 

No. 

Yes. 

14 

15 


15 

1 


1 

2212 First Ave. 

ance Union. 











Lincoln: 













Lincoln Medical College Hospital.. 

Private corporation.. 

General, except contagious.. 

1906 

Yes. 

No. 

25 

8 

3 

5 

6 


6 

609 South Seventeenth St. 












Nebraska Orthopedic Hospital 6 ... 

State of Nebraska. . 

Crippled and deformed . 

1905 

Yes. 

Yes. 

70 

2 


2 

10 


10 

2129 South Eleventh S*t. 













St. Elizabeth’s Hospital. 

Sisters of St. Francis. 

General. 

1889 

No. 

Yes. 

95 

32 

2 

30 

21 

1 

20 

South and Eleventh Sts. 













Omaha: 













Clarkson Hospital. 

Protestant Episcopal Church 

General. 

1893 

Yes. 

( 2 ) 

80 

20 

2 

18 

36 


36 

2100 Howard St. 











Creighton Memorial, St. Joseph’s 

Sisters of St. Francis. 

General, except contagious.. 

1880 

Yes. 

Yes. 

400 

35 

5 

30 

61 

3 

58 

Hospital. 













Tenth and Castellar Sts. 













Emergency Hospital. 

City of Omaha.... 

Contagious... 

1872 

No. 

Yes. 

200 

3 

1 

2 

2 


2 

Lincoln Ave. 













Immanuel Hospital. 

Lutheran Augustana Synod. 

General. 

1890 

Yes. 

Yes. 

65 

17 

2 

15 

21 

1 

20 

Thirty-fourth St. and Meredith 












Ave. 













Nebraska Methodist Hospital. 

Methodist Episcopal Church. 

General, except contagious 

1S91 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

11 

3 

8 

50 


50 

Cuming and Thirty-sixth Sts. 


and incurable. 











Presbyterian Hospital. 

Private corporation... . 

General, except contagious.. 

1892 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

21 


21' 

1240 South Tenth St. 










Swedish Mission Hospital. 

Swedish Hospital Assoeia- 

General, except contagious.. 

1905 

Yes. 

Yes. 

48 

18 

2 

16 

12 


12' 

3706 North Twenty-fourth St. 

tion. 











U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1905 

( 3 ) 

Yes. 

15 

1 

1 


9 

« 9 


Fort Omaha. 












Wise Memorial Hospital. 

Private corporation_ 

General, except contagious 

1899 

Yes. 

Yes. 

55 

40 

15 

25 

32 


32 

Twenty-fifth and Harney Sts. 


and insane. * 











South Omaha: 













South Omaha Hospital.... 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1904 

Yes. 

Yes. 

30 

12 

12 


9 


9 

2520 G St. 













NEW HAMPSHIRE. 













Benton: 













New Hampshire State Sanatorium. 

State of New Hampshire.... 

Tubercular. 

1908 

No. 

Yes. 

36 

3 

1 

2 

3 

1 

2 

Warren Summit P. O. 













Berlin: 













St. Louis Hospital. 

Grey Nuns. 

General. 

1905 

No. 

Yes. 

35 

18 

6 

12 

11 

1 

10 

397 Main St. 













Claremont: 













Claremont General Hospital. 

Ladies’ Union Aid Society.. 

General. 

1893 

Yes. 

Yes. 

25 

12 


12 

11 


11 

Elm St. 












Concord: 













Margaret Pillsbury General Hos- 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1884 

Yes. 

Yes. 

60 

8 


8 

16 


16 

pital. 













South Main St. 













New Hampshire Memorial Hos- 

Woman’s Hospital Aid As- 

General. 

1896 

Yes. 

Yes. 

25 

12 


12 

10 


10 

pital. i 

sociation. 












66 South St. 













Dover: 













Hayes Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1901 

No. 

Yes. 

12 



( 2 ) 

4 


4 

”45 Summer St. 











Wentworth Hospital. 

City of Dover. 

General, except contagious 

1906 

Yes 

Yes. 

40 

16 

12 

4 

15 

1 

14 

Central Ave.* 


and venereal. 










Exeter: 













Exeter Cottage Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except chronic and 

1891 

Yes. 

Yes 

25 

5 


5 

7 


7 

Prospect Hill. 


contagious.* 











Hanover: 













Mary Hitchcock Memorial Hospita 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1900 

Yes. 

Yes. 

36 

14 

2 

12 

21 


21 

1 Maynard St. 













Haverhill: 













Cottage Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1903 

Yes. 

Yes 

26 

3 


3 

9 


9 

Woodsville P. O. 












Keene: 













Elliot City Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1892 

Yes. 

Yes. 

40 

8 


8 

15 


15 

305 Main St. 










Laconia: 













Citv Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1895 

Yes. 

Yes. 

25 

8 


8 

8 


8 

Elliot St. 










Open three months. 


2 Not reported. 


5 Instruction for Hospital Corps. 


4 Enlisted men, Hospital Corps. 
























































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


313 


SANITARIUMS: 1910—Continued. 


PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING YEAR. 


PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 


Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

8 

5 

3 

426 

170 

256 

816 

310 

506 

230 

110 

120 

568 

568 


359 

359 


554 

( j > 

c 1 ) 

89 

37 

52 

204 

90 

114 

119 

50 

69 

909 

414 

495 

904 

439 

465 

3, 274 

2,160 

1,114 

345 

316 

29 

786 

382 

404 

2,054 

979 

1,075 

543 

222 

321 

547 

328 

219 

252 

252 


944 

378 

566 

386 

237 

149 

73 

35 

38 

309 

215 

94 

222 

99 

123 

445 

229 

216 

231 

41 

190 

72 

35 

37 

400 

190 

210 

286 

126 

160 

790 

371 

419 

169 

79 

90 

480 

226 

254 

219 

104 

115 


Total. 


90 

64 

9 

14 

7 

45 

11 

24 

63 

59 

36 

192 

36 

37 

95 

30 

21 

6 

40 

10 


30 

29 

13 

29 

18 

6 

30 

10 

28 

9 

20 

12 


RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 


Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Adults 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

Total. 

Derived from— 

Appro¬ 

pria¬ 

tions. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
patients. 

Other 

sources. 





( 2 ) 



$150 

( s ) 

42 

48 

44 

46 

$47,039 


$1,438 

45,601 

23 

41 

57 

7 

( j ) 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 

41,772 

( 2 > 

4 

5 

9 


6,470 



6. 470 


14 


14 


(2) 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


7 




( 2 ) 

( 2 > 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

45 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


4 

7 

11 


1,965 

$303 

145 

1,494 

$23 

10 

14 

19 

5 

12,000 



12,000 


27 

36 

12 

51 

21,910 

21,910 



(*) 

( j ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( j ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 


< 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

1,500 

127 

65 

173 

19 

( 2 ) 

1,951 

3,000 

65,000 

c 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 




17 

20 

33 

4 

i 

29,306 


112 

28,708 

486 

42 

53 

90 

5 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

55,597 

( 2 ) 

14 

16 

27 

3 

48,000 



48,000 


13 

8 

19 

2 

12,471 


791 

10,995 

685 

6 


6 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


16 

24 

37 

3 

40,108 


34,108 

6,000 

5 

5 

8 

2 

6,488 



6,394 

94 

16 

14 

30 


17,062 

12,500 


4,562 


22 

7 

28 

1 

6,800 

300 

120 

4,935 

1,445 

8 

5 

12 

1 

9,163 

1,000 

1,356 

6,214 

593 

13 

16 

25 

4 

21,045 

3,000 

2,406 

10,022 

5,617 

4 

14 

9 

9 

9,595 


1,075 

7,498 

1,022 

1 

5 

5 

i 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

2,562 

( 2 ) 

10 

20 

24 

6 

24,083 

6,000 


9,991 

8,092 

6 

4 

8 

2 

9,084 


1,616 

4,496 

2,972 

9 

19 

24 

4 

22,164 


1,080 

15, 723 

5,361 

5 

4 

8 

1 

5,696 


13 

5,546 

137 

6 

14 

13 

7 

18,679 

1,000 

1,937 

10,358 

5,384 

9 

3 

12 


8,389 

1,000 


5,622 

1,767 


* Includes Home Department. 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

£ 







a. 



For 


Land, 


a 


For 

perma- 


build- 

In- 

a 

o 

Total. 

running 

ex- 

nent 

im- 

Total. 

ings, 

and 

vested 

funds. 

3 

w 


penses. 

prove- 


equip- 





ments. 


ment. 


a 







HH 

( 2 ) 

$150 

( 2 ) 

$7,500 

$7,500 


a 

$46,542 

46,542 


92,327 

92,327 


4 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

120,000 

120,000 


5 

5,842 

5,842 


12,000 

12,000 


6- 

( s ) 

c 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

(») 


7 

( 2 > 

( s ) 

(*) 

(*) 

(*) 


8 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

75,000, 

75,000 


9 

1,700 

1,700 


1,500 

1,500 


10 

11,000 

10,000 

$1,000 

50,000 

50,000 


11 

23,260 

20,260 

3,000 

40,000 

40,000 


12 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

c 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

ia 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

170,000 

140,000 

$30,000 

14 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

c 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

15 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


10 

25,821 

25,821 


72,000 

72,000 


17 

53,750 

47,750 

6,000 

212,000 

212,000 


18 

38,000! 

36,000 

2,000 

75,000 

75,000 


19 

12, 714 

12,714 


30,000 

30,000 


20 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


21 

31,818 

31,818 


95,000 

95.000 


22 

9,112 

8,579 

533 

20,000 

20,000 


22 

17,062 

17,062 


82.000 

82,000 


1 

10,245 

3, 745 

6,500 

18,527 

18,527 


2 

9,308 

9,308 


36, 220 

22,055 

14,165 

a 

20,574 

20,574 


169,804 

75,000 

94,804 

4 

8, 778 

8,178 

600 

38,824 

20,000 

18,824 

5* 

6,028 

6,028 


8,000 

8,000 


0 

21,765 

16,065 

5,700 

118,300 

100,000 

18,300 

7 

7,807 

6,918 

889 

93,460 

50,000 

43,460 

8 

24,064 

21,414 

2,650 

409,967 

300,000 

109,967 

0 

4,519 

4,519 


11,000 

10,000 

1,000 

10 

16,634 

16,634 


85,468 

25,000 

60,468 

11 

8,311 

8,311 


78,968 

29,000 

49,968 

12 


6 Children. 


i Women and children. 




















































































































































































Institution number. 


314 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table IV.— HOSPITALS AND 


Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of cases treated. 

Year founded. 

Training school for 

nurses. 

Colored patients re¬ 

ceived. 

Number of beds. 

Protestant churches of city.. 

General. 

1888 

Yes. 

Yes. 

40 

City of Manchester. 

Diphtheria and scarlet fever. 

1902 

No. 

Yes. 

0) 

Sisters of Charity. 

General. 

1892 

No. 

Yes. 

50 

Sisters of Mercy_ 

General. 

1892 

Yes. 

Yes. 

60 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1893 

Yes. 

Yes. 

27 

Grey Nuns. 

General, except contagious.. 

1908 

Yes. 

Yes. 

60 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

(i) 

( 3 ) 

Yes. 

6 

Private organization. 

General, except contagious 

1908 

Yes. 

Yes. 

14 


and insane. 





Private individual. 

Tubercular. 

1901 

Yes. 

Yes. 

36 

Private association. 

General. 

1899 

Yes. 

Yes. 

18 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1886 

Yes. 

(i) 

30 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1891 

No. 

Yes. 

43 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1903 

Yes. 

No. 

26 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious 

1907 

No. 

No. 

15 


and venereal. 





City of Asbury Park. 

Infectious. 

1903 

No. 

Yes. 

31 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1897 

Yes. 

Yes. 

130 

City of Atlantic City. 

Contagious. 

1909 

No. 

Yes. 

50 

North American Outing 

Tubercular. 

1911 




Fund. 






Private corporation. 

General, except contagious .. 

1888 

Yes. 

Yes. 

75 

County of Essex. 

Contagious. 

1905 

No. 

Yes. 

225 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1898 

Yes. 

Yes. 

30 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1891 

Yes. 

Yes. 

40 

Sisters of the Sorrowful 

Convalescent. 

1895 

No 

Yes. 

70 

Mother. 






Order of St. Alexius. 

General. 

1892 

No. 

Yes. 

100 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1877 

Yes. 

Yes. 

136 

Sisters of Charity. 

General, except contagious.. 

1904 

Yes. 

Yes. 

90 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious 

1888 

Yes. 

Yes. 

55 


and incurable. 





U. S. Government. 

General. 

1898 

(3) 

Yes. 

30 

State of New Jersey. 

Incipient tubercular. 

1902 

No. 

Yes. 

130 

. Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1888 

Yes. 

Yes. 

60 

. Private organization. 

Incipient tubercular. 

1906 

No. 

No. 

25 

. Sisters of the Poor of St. 

General, except insane, ob- 

1863 

No. 

Yes. 

450 

Francis. 

stetrical, smallpox, and 






venereal. 






13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 

21 

22 

23 

24 

25 

26 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


7 

8 

9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 


NEW HAMPSHIRE—Continued. 


Manchester: 

Elliot Hospital. 

Isolation Hospital. 

Mammoth Road. 

Notre Dame Hospital. 

Notre Dame Ave. 

Sacred Heart Hospital. 

177 Amherst St. 
Nashua: 

Emergency Hospital. 

8 Prospect St. 

St. Joseph’s Hospital. 

Kinsley St. 

New Castle: 

U. S. Army Post Hospital. 
Fort Constitution. 
Newport: 

Carrie F. Wright Hospital 
Maple St. 

Pembroke: 

Pembroke Sanatorium_ 

Pembroke St. 
Plymouth: 

Plymouth Hospital. 

63 Highland St. 
Portsmouth: 

Portsmouth Hospital. 

Jenkins Ave. 

U. S. Naval Hospital.. 

Whitefield: 

Morrison Hospital. 

Wolfeboro: 

Huggins Hospital. 


NEW JERSEY. 

Asbury Park: 

Municipal Hospital for Infectious 
Diseases. 

Spring Hill Park P. O. 
Atlantic City: 

Atlantic City Hospital. 

26 South Ohio Ave.. 

Municipal Hospital. 

Adriatic and North Virginia 
Aves. 

Seashore Sanitarium *. 

Surrey Ave. 

Bayonne: 

Bayonne Hospital. 

12 East Thirtieth St. 
Belleville: 

Essex County Isolation Hospital. 
John St. and Franklin A' 
Bridgeton: 

Bridgeton Hospital. 

323 Irving Ave. 

Camden: 

Homeopathic Hospital.... 

430 Stevens St. 

Denville: 

St. Francis Sanitarium_ 


tve. 


Elizabeth: 

Alexian Brothers’ Hospital. 

East Jersey and Seventh Sts. 

Elizabeth General Hospital. 

East Jersey St. 

St. Elizabeth’s Hospital. 

204 South Broad St. 

Englewood: 

Englewood Hospital. 

Engle St. 

Fort Hancock: 

U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

Glen Gardner: 

New Jersey Sanatorium for Tuber¬ 
culous Diseases. 

Hackensack: 

Hackensack Hospital. 

Second St. 

Hill Crest Open Air Sanatoriu 
Terrace Ave. 

Hoboken: 

St. Mary’s Hospital. 

Fourth St. and Willow Ave. 


MEDICAL STAFF 
AT CLOSE OF 
YEAR. 


NURSES AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 


Total. 

Resident. 

Visiting. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

4 


4 

17 

1 

16 

(') 


(>) 

0) 

0) 

(») 

23 


23 

16 

l 

15 

12 


12 

22 

l 

21 

24 


24 

14 

l 

13 

18 


18 

28 

l 

27 

1 

1 


4 

* 4 


7 

5 

2 

5 


5 

13 

1 

12 

8 

2 

6 

3 


3 

7 


7 

1 


1 

12 


12 

1 

1 





8 

1 

7 

18 


18 

22 

6 

16 

3 


3 

(i) 

1 

0) 




17 

3 

14 

24 


24 

0) 


0) 

3 


3 

10 

2 

8 

3 16 


16 

7 

4 

3 

22 


22 

10 


10 

6 


6 

13 

1 

12 

12 


12 

2 

1 

1 

19 

1 

18 

14 

2 

12 

35 

35 


16 

4 

12 

6 39 


39 

44 

22 

22 

23 


23 

8 

2 

6 

12 


12 

2 

2 


15 

< 15 


2 

2 


6 


6 

7 

1 

6 

15 

1 

14 

1 

1 


2 


2 

31 

4 

27 

1 ^ 

39 

53 


i Not reported. 

5 Includes reports of Notre Dame and St. Peter’s Orphanages. 
3 Instruction for Hospital Corps. 


* Enlisted men, Hospital Corps. 

6 Includes report of dispensary. 

6 Exclusive of amount covered into city treasury. 

























































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


315 


SANITARIUMS: 1910—Continued. 


PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING YEAR. 

PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE 

OF YEAR. 


RECEIPTS DURING 

YEAR. 


PAYMENTS DURING 

YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 











Derived from— 




For 


Land, 
















For 

perma- 


build- 

In- 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Adults 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

Total. 

Appro- 

Dona- 

Care of 

Other 

Total. 

running 

ex- 

nent 

im- 

Total. 

mgs, 

and 

vested 

funds. 










pria- 

tions. 

tions. 

patients. 

sources. 


penses. 

prove- 

ments. 


equip¬ 

ment. 


327 

121 

206 

12 

4 

8 

10 

2 

$12,568 

$300 

$312 

$8,215 

$3,741 

$14,977 

$14,977 


$138,315 

$102,019 

$36,296 

97 

0) 

(*) 

0) 

0) 

c) 

o) 

c> 

o) 

(■> 

(>) 

242 

(*) 

5,106 

4,689 

$ii7 

15,000 

15,000 


400 

259 

141 

18 

13 

5 

18 


2 35,545 

300 

3,123 

4,266 

27,856 

2 35,544 

34,008 

1,536 

2 102,212 

89,762 

12,450 

702 

400 

302 

48 

29 

19 

41 

7 

25,658 

300 

897 

13,190 

11,271 

25,595 

16,768 

8,827 

25,000 

25,000 


505 

288 

217 

22 

12 

10 

22 


13,165 

2,000 

2,378 

8,787 


14,429 

14,429 

10,000 

10,000 


581 

253 

328 

28 

11 

17 

25 

3 

16,854 

1,500 

1,792 

13,334 

228 

16,833 

15,338 

1,495 

125,000 

125,000 


60 

60 


1 

1 


1 


(!) 

c 1 ) 


0) 


(!) 

( l ) 

0) 

( l ) 

( l ) 


64 

23 

41 

4 

1 

3 

4 


2,262 


2,196 

66 

2,434 

2,434 

20.000 

15,000 

5,000 

0) 

( i ) 

(0 

0) 

o) 

C 1 ) 

0) 

(>) 

0) 

(*) 

( i ) 

o) 

o) 

C 1 ) 

o) 

(■) 

0) 

( i ) 

0) 

168 

133 

35 

9 

7 

2 

8 

1 

6,462 


711 

5,682 

69 

6,604 

6,054 

550 

7,179 

5,500 

1,679 

318 

(*) 

0) 

23 

(*) 

0) 

17 

6 

13,323 

500 

2,549 

6,860 

3,414 

13,053 

13,053 


0) 

(0 

87,385 

234 

234 







0) 

o) 


0) 


0) 

(i) 

(i) 

0) 

C 1 ) 


294 

118 

176 

15 

6 

9 

12 

3 

12,332 


12,332 


13,025 

12,025 

1,000 

50,000 

50,000 


93 

49 

44 

5 

3 

2 

5 


4,995 

500 

536 

2,898 

1,061 

23,500 

5,000 

18,500 

23,500 

5,000 

18,500 

1 


1 






595 

261 

334 



595 

261 

334 

18,636 

18,636 


1,296 

565 

731 

50 

17 

33 

39 

11 

5 50,687 

26,000 

3,057 

16,696 

4,934 

5 41,764 

40,257 

1,507 

6 160,000 

160,000 


47 

25 

22 

9 

7 

2 

4 

5 

11,295 

5 10,667 


7 628 


11,295 

11,295 


104,835 

104,835 


742 

524 

218 

30 

17 

13 

25 

5 

529,1S6 

14,856 

2,882 

10,873 

575 

5 28,645 

22,835 

5,810 

* 112,000 

102,000 

10,000 

826 

365 

461 

67 

41 

7 

26 

7 

13 

54 

76 531 

75 561 


808 

162 

216,764 

76,531 

140,233 

421,855 

421,855 


209 

89 

120 

14 

12 

2 

8,881 

2,000 

2,987 

3,894 


8,637 

7,896 

741 

16,500 

16 000 

500 

649 

271 

378 

25 

11 

14 

18 

7 

5 17,255 

3,500 

3,474 

3,597 

6,684 

5 13,043 

12,749 

294 

6 38,900 

33,000 

5,900 

726 

305 

421 

25 

1C 

15 

25 


28,084 



28,084 


24,264 

13,021 

11,243 

50,000 

50,000 


1 062 

1 06 9 

47 

47 

47 


29,067 

7,000 

2,460 

13,746 

5,861 

29,714 

25,913 

3,801 

9 100,000 

9 100,000 


1,692 

782 

910 

85 

4C 

45 

71 

14 

5 41,032 

16,000 

1,153 

12,462 

11,417 

5 43,065 

43,065 

6 160,000 

125,000 

35,000 

/i\ 

/i\ 

/■n 

44 

17 

27 

30 

14 

29 350 

4 000 

350 


25,000 

29,000 

29,000 


80,000 

80,000 


CD 

io 588 

273 

\) 

315 

29 

11 

18 

26 

3 

32,741 

5,750 

6,775 

9,196 

11,020 

29,252 

27,978 

1,274 

75,993 

50,000 

25,993 

QIC 

318 


9 

g 


9 


0) 

0) 


( l ) 


( l ) 

(i) 

( l ) 

(0 

C 1 ) 


070 

91 Q 


19Q 

7? 

50 

111 

12 

132 390 

125,500 


6,890 


120,858 

70,962 

49,896 

330,716 

330,716 


oiL 

% 

644 

333 

li)0 

311 

JL AO 

31 

16 

15 

25 

6 

16,810 

2,950 

. 

1,248 

7,925 

4,687 

16,182 

14,982 

1,200 

50,000 

50,000 



1 7 

9,4 

16 

7 

q 

16 


4 500 



4,500 


4,500 

4,500 


n 3,000 

ii 3,000 


41 

3,212 

1/ 

0) 

(») 

10 

347 

(*) 

( l ) 

C 1 ) 

(*) 

54,626 

18,000 

26,478 

10,148 

. 

53,711 

38,757 

14,954 

( i ) 

(>) 

(>) 


U 

M 

a 

p 

p 

p 

.2 

P 

1 

H-t 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 

21 

22 

23 

24 

25 

26 

1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 

9 

10 

11 

12 

• 13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 


i Covered into city treasury. 
b Not opened until 1911. 

9 Buildings and equipment 


Exclusive of out-patients, 
n Equipment. 




















































































































































316 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table IV.— HOSPITALS AND 


£ 

6 

3 

a 

a 

o 

3 


q 

G 


19 

20 


21 


22 

23 

24 

25 

26 

27 

28 

29 

30 

31 

32 

33 

34 

35 

36 

37 

38 

39 

40 

41 

42 

43 

44 

45 

46 

47 

48 

49 

50 

51 

52 

53 

54 

55 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


Supervised or conducted by— 


NEW JERSEY—Continued. 


Jersey City: 

Christ Hospital. 

176 Palisade Ave. 


Private organization (Epis¬ 
copal). 


Jersey City Hospital. 

Baldwin Ave. 

St. Francis Hospital. 

East Hamilton Place. 

Long Branch: 

Monmouth Memorial Hospital. 

Third Ave. 

Montclair: 

Mountainside Hospital. 

Morristown: 

Morristown Memorial Hospital.... 
Morris St. 

Mount Holly: 

Mount Holly Hospital. 

Madison Ave. 

New Brunswick: 

St. Peter’s General Hospital. 

159 Somerset St. 

Wells Hospital... 

Somerset St. 

Newark: 

Babies’ Hospital. 

437 High St. 

Home for Crippled Children. 

190 Clifton Ave. 

Homeopathic Hospital of Essex 
County. 

133 Littleton Ave. 

Hospital for Women and Children. 
540 Central Ave. 

Jewish Hospital. 

645 High St. 

Newark Charitable Eye and Ear 
Infirmary. 

77 Central Ave. 

Newark City Hospital 7 . 

116 Fairmount Ave. 

Newark German Hospital. 

340 Bank St. 

St. Barnabas Hospital. 

685 High St. 

St. James Hospital. 

Jefferson St. 

St. Michael’s Hospital. 

304 High St. 

Tuberculosis Day Camp 9 . 

425 South Orange Ave. 
Orange: 

Memorial Hospital. 

225 Essex Ave. 

New Jersey Orthopedic Hospital 
and Dispensary. 

148 Scotland St. 

St. Mary’s Hospital. 

101 Centre St. 

Passaic: 

City Hospital for Contagious 
Diseases. 

Paulison Ave. 

Passaic General Hospital. 

Lafayette Ave. 

St. Mary’s Hospital. 

Pemmington Ave. 

Paterson: 

Paterson General Hospital. 

Market St. and Madison Ave. 
Paterson Isolation Hospital. 


City of Jersey City. 

Sisters of the Poor of St. 
Francis. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Sisters of Charity. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

City of Newark. 

Private organization. 

Protestant Episcopal Church 

Sisters of Third Order of St. 
Francis. 

Sisters of the Poor of St. 
Francis. 

Newark Anti-Tuberculosis 
Association. 

Private organization. 

Private corporation. 

Sisters of St. Francis. 

City of Passaic. 

Private corporation. 

Sisters of Charity. 

Private corporation. 

City of Paterson. 


St. Joseph’s Hospital. 

Main St. 

Perth Amboy: 

Perth Amboy City Hospital. 

New Brunswick Ave. 
Plainfield: 

Muhlenberg Hospital. 

Park Ave. and Randolph 
Road. 

Red Bank: 

Red Bank Isolation Hospital 11 ... 
Salem: 

U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

Fort Mott. 

Secaucus: 

Contagious Disease Hospital. 

Snake Hill. 

Hudson County Smallpox Hospital 
Hudson County Tuberculosis Hos¬ 
pital and Sanatorium. 


Sisters of Charity. 

Private corporation... 
Private corporation... 

Shrewsbury Township 
U. S. Government_ 

Count y of Hudson.... 

County of Hudson.... 
County of Hudson.... 


Class of cases treated. 

Year founded. 

Training school for 

nurses. 

Colored patients re¬ 

ceived. 

Number of beds. 

MEDICAL STAFF 
AT CLOSE OF 
YEAR. 

NURSES AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 

Total. 

Resident. 

Visiting. 

*3 

o 

H 

Male. 

Female. 

General, except contagious. 

1873 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

20 

4 

16 

37 


37 

insane, tubercular, and 











venereal. 











General. 

1869 

Yes. 

Yes. 

156 

21 

6 

15 

36 

1 

35 

General. 

1865 

No. 

Yes. 

300 

21 

4 

17 

43 

10 

33 

General, except contagious.. 

1889 

Yes. 

Yes. 

120 

8 

1 

7 

25 


25 

General, except contagious.. 

1890 

Yes. 

Yes. 

86 

30 


30 

26 


26 

General, except chronic and 

1892 

Yes. 

Yes. 

74 

11 


11 

15 


15 

obstetrical. 











General. 

1879 

No. 

Yes. 

25 

10 

6 

4 

6 


6 


1907 

Yes. 

Yes. 

45 

10 


10 

9 


9 


1884 

No. 

Yes. 

21 

9 


9 

5 


5 

General 

1896 

Yes. 

Yes. 

30 

10 


10 

18 


18 

Orthopedic... 

1892 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

7 


7 

7 


7 

General 

1903 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

24 


24 

14 


14 

General. 

1882 

Yes. 

Yes. 

32 

13 


13 

13 

2 

11 

General, except contagious 

1901 

Yes. 

Yes. 

85 

37 

2 

35 

23 

2 

21 

and mental. 











Eye and ear.... 

1880 

No. 

Yes. 

35 

23 

1 

22 

7 


7 

General. 

1882 

Yes. 

Yes. 

340 

40 

10 

30 

72 


72 

General, except contagious.. 

1869 

Yes. 

Yes. 

75 

8 

2 

6 

19 


19 

General. 

1864 

Yes. 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

21 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


1900 

Yes. 

Yes. 

75 

3 40 



3 21 


21 

and incurable. 











General, except contagious 

1867 

No. 

Yes. 

300 

32 

2 

30 

36 

12 

24 

and obstetrical. 











Pulmonary tubercular 

1909 

No. 

No. 

10 

3 


3 

3 


3 

General. 

1873 

Yes. 

Yes. 

125 

20 

2 

18 

36 


36 

Orthopedic. 

1903 

No. 

Yes. 

9 

1 


1 

2 


2 

General. 

1905 

Yes. 

Yes. 

30 

8 


8 

7 


7 

Contagious. 

1904 

No. 

Yes. 

46 

1 


1 

3 


3 

General. 

1892 

Yes. 

Yes. 

70 

3 14 

2 

12 

3 18 


18 

General, except contagious.. 

1894 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

8 

2 

6 

18 


18 

General. 

1871 

Yes. 

Yes. 

150 

37 

6 

31 

39 


39 

Contagious, including tuber- 

1896 

No. 

Yes. 

36 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

8 

4 

4 

cular. 











General. 

1877 

Yes. 

Yes. 

150 

33 

3 

30 

36 

5 

31 

General, except chronic and 

1902 

Yes. 

Yes. 

26 

6 


6 

8 


8 

contagious. 











General, except insane and 

1881 

Yes. 

Yes. 

66 

21 

1 

20 

18 


18 

obstetrical. 











Smallpox. 

1893 

No. 

Yes. 

22 







General. 

( 2 ) 

( 12 ) 

No. 

15 

1 

1 


( 13 ) 

(13) 


Contagious, except smallpox 

1S93 

No. 

Yes. 

24 

1 


1 

2 

1 

1 

and tubercular. 











Smallpox. 

1873 

No. 

Yes. 

50 

2 

1 

1 




Tubercular. 

1909 

No. 

Yes. 

116 

2 

1 

1 

io 


10 


1 Exclusive of 678 children, sex not given. 

2 Not reported. 

3 Includes report of dispensary. 

4 Exclusive of out-patients. 


6 Includes Babies’ Hospital Milk Dispensary. 
* Temporarily closed. 

7 Charity patients only. 









































































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


317 


SANITARIUMS: 1910—Continued. 


PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING YEAR. 

PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 


RECEIPTS DURING 

YEAR. 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe- 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Adults 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

Total. 

Appro¬ 

pria¬ 

tions. 

Derived 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

from— 

Care of 
patients. 

Other 1 
sources.; 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

i 1,678 

790 

888 

73 


( 2 > 

(*> 

< 2 ) 

3$52,310 


$8,066 

$27,861 

$16,383 

3 $57,742 

( 2 > 

(*) 

3 $204,108 

$180,558 

$23,550 

19 

10,600 

7,200 

3,400 

140 

100 

40 

135 

5 

80,000 

$80,000 




80,000 

$30,000 


500,000 

500,000 


20 

2,370 

1,437 

933 

293 

134 

159 

273 

20 

53,746 

23 500 

21,600 

8,646 

52,000 

50,000 

$2,000 

200,000 

200,000 


21 

1,244 

605 

639 

61 

36 

25 

57 

4 

3 78,941 


39,471 

25,578 

13,892 

3 84,397 

44,397 

40,000 

3 175,000 

175,000 


22 

1,054 

425 

629 

53 

24 

29 

47 

6 

42,734 


14,449 

18,796 

9,489 

41,594 

40,594 

1,000 

175,848 

143,696 

32,152 

23 

* 665, 

372 

293 

57 

30 

27 

32 

25 

23,900 


5,260 

12,946 

5,694 

23,875 

21,498 

2,377 

240,000 

150,000 

90,000 

24 

6S0 

400 

280 

23 

11 

12 

14 

9 

8,500 

2,000 

3,500 

900 

2,100 

7,584 

6,90-1 

680 

20,370 

12,000 

8,370 

25 

704 

319 

385 

31 

15 

16 

30 

1 

15,128 

5,000 


10,128 


14,926 

14,926 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

26 

308 

134 

174 

18 

10 

8 

18 


10,475 

4 250 

1 219 

3 551 

1 455 

11,300 

11,300 


46,500 

35,000 

11,500 

27 

398 

238 

160 

37 

22 

15 


37 

12,250 

2,500 

5,821 

500 

3,429 

9,586 

7,836 

1,750 

M2,000 

5 30,000 

12,000 

28 

2 813 

1,813 

1,000 

30 

18 

12 


30 

3 9,204 

2,000 

3 960 

2 644 

600 

3 8,648 

8,64S 


3 126,274 

100,000 

26,274 

29 

353 

92 

261 

(«) 




27,262 

4 314 

15,325 

7,623 

51,562 

19,766 

31,796 

57,262 

57,262 

30 

292 


292 

17 


17 

17 


11,697 

2,000 

1 211 

6,188 

2,298 

10,428 

10,428 


30,000 

30,000 


31 

4 1,242 

533 

709 

61 

23 

38 

58 

3 

47,977 

2,500 

12,434 

16,055 

16,988 

48,107 

44,768 

3,339 

117,941 

115,941 

2,000 

32 

1,262 

631 

631 

22 

10 

12 

13 

9 

3 16,095 

2,500 

7,621 

3,585 

2,389 

3 16,125 

16,125 


3 105,000 

60,000 

45,000 

33 

8 928 

5 907 

3,021 

326 

185 

141 

162 

164 

8 157,086 

8 154,500 



2,586 

8 157,086 

157,0S6 


8 850,000 

850,000 


34 

4 813 

397 

416 

53 

29 

24 

44 

9 

22,880 

2,500 

2,971 

12,635 

4,774 

24,077 

( 2 ) 

(») 

95,000 

60,000 

35,000 

35 

1,129 

465 

664 

(*) 

( j ) 

( ! > 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

36,879 

2,750 

7,188 

15,970 

10,971 

50,110 

36,167 

13,943 

149,274 


149,274 

36 

905 

467 

438 

50 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

(2) 

( 2 ) 

3 21,697 

2,625 

5,065 

14,007 


3 20,030 

18,030 

2,000 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


37 

9 A19 

1 fi38 

974 

243 

138 

105 

217 

26 

3 34 000 

3,000 

25 000 

6 000 


( 2 ) 

3 28,000 

( 2 ) 

3 500,000 

500,000 


38 

30 

16 

14 




2,725 

2,725 



2,725 

2,571 

154 

1,000 

1,000 


39 

1,599 

784 

815 

84 

38 

46 

73 

11 

62,173 

3,550 

16,123 

21,369 

21,131 

62,871 

62,871 


( 2 ) 

(*) 

( 2 ) 

40 

79 

18 

14 

9 

4 

5 

1 

8 

5,889 


4,352 

997 

540 

6,337 

6,337 


12,500 

10 2,000 

10,500 

41 

499 

187 

312 

24 

( j ) 

(*) 

(*) 

( j ) 

( j ) 

(*) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

(») 

( 2 > 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

(») 

( 2 > 

42 


29 

37 

11 

3 

8 

5 

6 

7,278 

7,168 


110 


7,142 

6,562 

580 

35,000 

35,000 


43 

1,060 

353 

707 

40 

19 

21 

31 

9 

3 32,984 

4,250 

12,488 

15,138 

1,108 

3 33,525 

33,525 


3 81,660 

77,995 

3,665 

44 



7A7 

26 

11 

15 

24 

2 

26 835 

5 250 

6 736 

12 148 

2 701 

19,859 

19,859 


85,000 

85,000 


45 

i iy 

2,043 

oOO 

1,103 

940 

1 8 1 

47 

34 

63 

18 

3 69,417 

13,500 

3,153 

19,294 

33,470 

3 66,646 

64,560 

2,086 

3 251,205 

123,461 

127,744 

46 

117 

61 

56 

11 

6 

5 

11 


7 500 

7 500 




20,800 

7,300 

13,500 

42,000 

42,000 


47 

2,006 

1,095 

911 

112 

66 

46 

98 

14 

54,916 

13,500 

5,305 

16,902 

19,209 

53,640 

53,640 

200,000 

200,000 


48 

331 

247 

84 

20 

14 

6 

19 

1 

18,063 

9,550 

2,350 

2,666 

3,497 

15,313 

12,016 

3,297 

36,534 

33,784 

2,750 

49 

765 

373 

392 

104 

44 

60 

104 


32,079 

6,750 

8,245 

13,870 

3,214 

43,580 

37,916 

5,664 

176,696 

139,824 

36,872 

50 

















3,500 

3,500 


51 

799 

799 


2 

2 


2 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


52 



Q 

4 

1 

3 

4 


3 500 

3 500 



3,500 

3,500 


35,000 

35,000 


53 

14 

7 

0 

3 






9,000 

9,000 




9,000 

9,000 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


54 

490 

369 

121 

96 

70 

26 

85 

11 

71^ 459 

7o;ooo 


1,459 


78,025 

78,025 


100,000 

100,000 

.. 

55 


8 Includes report of Newark City Dispensary. 11 No patients during 1910. 

9 Open during summer only. 12 Instruction for Hospital Corps. 

10 Equipment? 13 Enlisted men, Hospital Corps. 




















































































































































































318 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 


Table IV.— HOSPITALS AND 







Ui 

£ 

1 

9 

1-4 


MEDICAL STAFF 
AT CLOSE OF 

NURSES AT CLOSE 
OP YEAR. 

Institution numbei 





o 

Colored patients 

ceived. 


YEAR. 


NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of cases treated. 

• 

Year founded. 

Training scho 

nurses. 

Number of beds 

■ 4-3 

O 

H 

+3 

a 

<33 

C/7 

<33 

PH 

.a 

3 

> 

■ 4-3 

o 

H 

03 

aJ 

a 

03 

a 

03 

Ph 


NEW JERSEY—Continued. 














Somerville: 








8 




6 

56 

Somerset Hospital. 

Private corporation.. 

General, except contagious.. 

1901 

Yes. 

Yes. 

22 

15 

7 

6 


Spring Lake Beach: 




1 

15 



13 

57 

Ann May Memorial Homeopathic 
Hospital. 


General, except contagious.. 

1903 

Yes. 

Yes. 

45 

16 

13 









First Ave. 














Trenton: 









15 



15 

58 

McKinley Memorial Hospital 1 . 

Private corporation _ 

General, except alcoholic, 
contagious, and mental. 

1887 

Yes. 

Yes. 

75 

18 

3 

15 


Brunswick Ave. 



32 



19 

59 

Mercer Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1896 

Yes. 

Yes. 

80 

34 

2 

19 


444 Bellevue Ave. 





1 




60 

Municipal Hospital. 

City of Trenton 

Contagious.... 

1892 

No. 

Yes. 

25 

1 


1 


1 

61 

St. Francis Hospital. 

Sisters of Third Order of St. 

(S) . 

1872 

( 2 ) 

Yes. 

( 2 ) 

23 

4 

19 

32 

7 

25 

Chambers St. and Hamilton 

Francis. 








Ave. 














Verona: 









( 2 ) 




62 

Newark City Sanatorium. 

City of Newark. 

Tubercular.. . 

190S 

No. 

No. 

61 

( 2 ) 

1 

2 


2 

Weehawxen: 







63 

North Hudson Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1891 

Yes. 

Yes. 

41 

19 

1 

18 

12 


12 

Bull’s Ferry Road. 









NEW MEXICO. 














Albuquerque: 









( 2 ) 




1 

St. Joseph’s Hospital. 

Sisters of Charitv.... 

General, except contagious.. 

1902 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

( 2 ) 


12 

1 

11 


Grand Ave.,Box 668. 





2 

Santa Fe Hospital 3 . 

Santa Fe Coast Lines Hospi¬ 
tal Association. 

General. 

1880 

No. 

Yes. 

30 

5 

2 

3 

3 

1 

2 


816 South*Broadway. 








3 

Southwestern Presbyterian Sana¬ 
torium. 

Presbyterian Synod of New 
Mexico. 

Tubercular.. 

1908 

No. 

No. 

50 

12 

12 


2 


2 









115 South Water St. 














Carlsbad: 













4 

Eddv County Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1898 

No. 

No. 

8 

6 


6 

1 


1 


Deming: 








5 

Ladies’ Hospital . 

Private corporation .. 

General, except contagious.. 

1897 

No. 

( 2 ) 

10 

4 


4 





East Las Vegas: 








6 

St. Anthony’s Sanitarium. 

Sisters of Charity . 

Tubercular . 

1896 

No. 

Yes. 

35 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

12 


12 


Eighth'St. 






Fort Bayard: 













7 

U. S. Army General Hospital . 

U. S. Government . 

Tubercular.... 

1899 

No. 

Yes. 

374 

12 

12 


20 


20 


Fort Stanton: 





8 

U. S. Marine Hospital . 

U. S. Government . 

General . 

1899 

No. 

Yes. 

250 

5 

5 


6 

6 


Gallup: 









9 

Gallup Hospital . 

State of New Mexico . 

General . 

1906 

No. 

Yes. 

4 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

1 

1 



Gibson: 







10 

Victor-American Fuel Co. Hos- 

Victor-American Fuel Co ... 

General . 

1902 

No. 

Yes. 

14 

2 

1 

1 

2 


2 

pital. 3 







Las Vegas: 













11 

Atchison, Topeka, & Santa Fe 
Hospital. 3 

Atchison, Topeka, & Santa 
Fe Hospital Association. 

General . 

1891 

No. 

Yes. 

25 

3 

1 

2 

2 

2 










Hot Springs Boulevard. 












12 

Las Vegas Hospital . 

Private corporation . 

General, largely tubercular.. 

1886 

No. 

Yes. 

25 

5 


5 

3 


3 

Mora Ave. 









Lincoln: 













13 

Ranch Sanatorium for Tuberculosis 

Private organization . 

Tubercular . 

1906 

No. 

No. 

25 

2 

2 


2 

1 

1 

Roswell: 







14 

St. Marv’s Hospital . 

Sisters of the Sorrowful 

General, except contagious.. 

1906 

No. 

Yes. 

39 

15 


15 

8 


8 

South Main St. 

Mother. 




Santa Fe: 













15 

St. Vincent’s Hospital and Sani¬ 
tarium. 

Sisters of Charity . 

General . 

1868 

No. 

Yes. 

50 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 



16 

Sunmount Sanatorium . 

Private organization . 

Tubercular . 

1908 

No. 

No. 

25 

( 2 ) 

1 

( 2 ) 

2 


2 

Silver City: 






17 

Grant County and Ladies’ Hospi- 

Private corporation . 

General . 

1887 

No. 

Yes. 

12 

6 


6 

2 

1 

1 


tal, Hudson St. 

V 











18 

New Mexico Cottage Sanatorium.. 
St. Joseph’s Sanatorium. 

Private corporation. 

Tubercular. 

1905 

No. 

Yes. 

77 

2 

2 


3 


3 

19 

Sisters of Mercy. 

Tubercular. 

1890 

No. 

No. 

40 

2 

1 

1 

1 


1 

Kelly and B Sts. 







NEW YORK. 














Albany: 













1 

Albany Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1849 

Yes. 

Yes. 

365 

34 

9 

25 

129 

1 

8 

121 


New Scotland Ave. 



2 

Albany Hospital for Incurables... 
Kenwood Heights. 

Private corporation. 

Incurable. 

1884 

No. 

Yes. 

64 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

6 

2 

1 

1 








3 

Central Federation of Labor Tu- 

Central Federation of Labor. 

Tubercular. 

1908 

No. 

No. 

16 

9 


9 

1 


1 


berculosis Pavilion. 






McCarthy Ave. 













4 

Child’s Hospital. 

Corning Foundation foi 
Christian Work, Diocese 

General. 

1875 

Yes. 

Yes. 

70 

16 


16 

12 


12 


41 Elk St. 






of Albany. 












5 

Frances Elliott Austin Maternity 
Hospital. 

Sisters of Charity. 

Maternity. 

1909 

Yes. 

Yes. 

8 

2 


2 

3 


3 











95 Elm St. 













6 

Homeopathic Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1872 

Yes. 

Yes. 

90 

18 

4 

14 

29 


29 


165 North Pearl St. 





7 

St. Peter’s Hospital. 

Sisters of Mercy. 

General. 

1869 

Yes. 

Yes. 

125 

24 

4 

20 

31 

3 

28 


871 Broadway. 






Amsterdam: 













8 

Amsterdam Citv Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1888 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

12 


12 

9 


9 


220 Guv Park Ave. 




9 

St. Marv’s Hospital. 

Sisters of St. Joseph. 

General. 

1903 

No. 

Yes. 

31 

8 


8 

1 

7 

i 

6 


1 335 Guy Park Ave. 







1 Name changed from Trenton City Hospital, Jan. 3, 1902. 
* Not reported, 
s Employees. 


4 Included in report of Santa Fe Hospital at Los Angeles, Cal. 

6 Includes report of dispensaries operated by Victor-American Fuel Co. at Gibson 
and Heaton, N. Mex. 






































































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


319 


SANITARIUMS: 1910—Continued. 


PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING YEAR. 

PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE 

OF YEAR. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Adults 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

229 

135 

94 

9 

6 

3 

9 


362 

137 

225 

17 

10 

7 

17 


852 

442 

410 

47 

28 

19 

32 

15 

1,375 

785 

590 

57 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

28 

12 

16 






2,058 

1,224 

834 

( 2 ) 

W 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

137 

107 

30 

50 

34 

16 

49 

1 

919 

552 

367 

38 

22 

16 

34 

4 

700 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

68 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

286 

286 


21 

21 


21 


50 

25 

25 

33 

18 

15 

32 

1 

85 

50 

35 

2 

2 


2 


40 

27 

13 

5 

2 

3 

3 

2 

200 

125 

75 

33 

20 

13 

33 


783 

773 

10 

200 

199 

1 

200 


322 

322 


178 

178 


178 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

2 

1 

1 


2 

86 

86 


10 

10 


10 


177 

177 


15 

15 


15 


176 

» 

111 

65 

18 

12 

6 

18 


34 

29 

5 

16 

13 

3 

16 


257 

125 

132 

20 

9 

11 

20 


( 2 ) • 

( 2 ) 

(2) 

40 

40 


40 


42 

31 

11 

16 

11 

5 

16 


139 

109 

30 

6 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

150 

100 

50 

71 

43 

28 

70 

1 

100 

60 

40 

38 

26 

12 

38 


3,533 

1,733 

1,800 

219 

99 

120 

219 


61 

16 

45 

52 

14 

38 

51 

1 

23 

17 

6 

10 

8 

2 

10 


344 

176 

168 

40 

26 

14 


40 

43 


43 

1 


1 

1 


1,258 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

62 

33 

29 

58 

4 

1,463 

749 

714 

75 

43 

32 

75 


456 

221 

235 

27 

15 

12 

24 

3 

423 

234 

189 

19 

11 

8 

18 

1 


Total. 


$8,824 
15,800 

22,473 

( 2 ) 

1,851 

( 2 ) 

39,608 
18,400 


( 2 ) 

(*) 
32,000 

2,660 
9/996 
( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 
104,022 
( 2 ) 
f 35,604 

( 8 ) 

9,869 

7,935 

9,383 

( 2 ) 

9,880 

5,263 

84,177 

9,300 

7 167,820 
22,597 
4,111 

16,183 


106,851 


RECEIPTS DURING 

YEAR. 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Derived from— 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

Appro¬ 

pria¬ 

tions. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
patients. 

Other 

sources. 

$1,000 

$2,763 

$3,023 

$2,038 

$6, 730 

$6,277 

$453 

$22,000 

$22,000 


56 

50 

5,395 

6,274 

4,081 

15,427 

13,651 

1,776 

61,000 

60,000 

$1,000 

57 

6,533 

7,042 

7,574 

1,324 

21,679 

20,771 

908 

80,000 

75,000 

5,000 

58 

4,000 

( 2 ) 

< 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

59 

1,851 




1,851 

1,851 


35,000 

35,000 


60 

6| 533 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

40,211 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

20,000 

61 

39,143 


465 


39 608 

37,380 

2,228 

83,957 

83,957 


62 

400 

8,000 

10,000 


48 000 

10 000 

38,000 

65,000 

65,000 


63 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

(*) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

100,000 

( 2 ) 

(*) 

1 


(<) 



( 4 ) 

(2) 

( 2 ) 

(<) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

2 


20,000 

12,000 


32 000 

12,000 

20,000 

66,000 

40,000 

26,000 

3 

1,800 

860 


2 852 

2 212 

640 

5,000 

5,000 

4 

1,800 

4,205 

991 

3,000 

9,809 

2,420 

7,389 

12,000 

12,000 

■ 

5 



( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) ' 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

6 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


(2) 

(2) 

(2) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


7 

104,022 



104 022 

(2) 

(2) 

500,000 

500,000 


8 

1,800 


( 2 ) 

<*) 

3 ion 

1 600 

1 500 

3,000 

3,000 


9 


35,604 

6 35,604 

35,604 


10,000 

10,000 


10 


(«) 


(«) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

C) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

11 

3,172 

603 

4,835 

1,259 

10,743 

9,353 

1,390 

10,000 

10,000 


12 



6 435 

1,500 

6,000 

4,000 

2,000 

25,000 

25,000 


13 


44 

9 339 


9,075 

9,075 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


14 

3,600 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

C 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

15 


300 

9 580 


9,700 

8,100 

1,600 

13,150 

13,150 


16 

i goo 

306 

3 076 

81 

4 916 

4,916 

2,000 

2,000 


17 


84,177 

83,818 

78,822 

4,996 

87,188 

87,188 


18 

1 K00 


7 500 


10 500 

6' 500 

4,000 

12,000 

12,000 


19 

17,641 

7,388 

107,576 

35,215 

7 161,432 

152,804 

8,628 

7 612,750 

300,000 

312,750 

1 

6,540 

3,749 

1,652 

10,656 

29,971 

7,969 

22,002 

69,000 

69,000 


2 


4,111 



3,933 

3,733 

200 

4,809 

4,809 


3 

5,577 

1,594 

2,913 

6,099 

16,081 

14,789 

1,292 

115,504 

61,500 

54,004 

4 

Q14 

10ft 

1 170 

428 

8 2,523 

2 523 


8 10,000 

10,000 


5 

5,403 

6,937 

25,631 

68,880 

106,307 

41,509 

64,798 

210,565 

175,065 

35,500 

6 

8,109 

56,800 

27,633 

281 

7 77,630 

41,130 

36,500 

7 225,000 

225,000 


7 


1,110 

12,473 

140 

16,131 

16,131 


63,500 

60,000 

3,500 

8 


198 

9,309 

1,142 

10,426 

9,650 

776 

44,000 

44,000 

. 

l 

9 


6 Included in report of Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Hospital, Topeka, Kans. 

7 Includes report of dispensary. 

s Includes report of Frances Elliott Austin Infants’ Home. 












































































































































































320 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table IV.— HOSPITALS AND 


c 

3 

a 

D 

g 

a 


o 


p 


£ 


10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 


16 

17 

18 

19 

20 

21 

22 

23 

24 

25 

26 

27 

28 

29 

30 

31 

32 

33 


34 

35 


36 

37 

38 

39 

40 

41 

42 

43 

44 

45 


<L 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


Supervised or conducted by— 


Class of cases treated. 



NEW YORK—Continued. 


Auburn: 

Auburn City Hospital. 

5 Lansing St. 

Batavia: 

Batavia Hospital. 

North St. 

Bedford Hills: 

Monteflore Home County Sanita¬ 
rium. 

Binghamton: 

City Hospital... 

24 Mitchell Ave. 

Mountain Sanatorium. 

Brighton: 

Sanatorium Gabriels. 

Gabriels P. O. 

Brooklyn : 3 
Bronxville: 

Lawrence Hospital. 


Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

City of Binghamton. 
City of Binghamton. 
Sisters of Mercy. 

Private corporation. 


Buffalo: 

Buffalo General Hospital. 

100 High St. 

Buffalo Homeopathic Hospital.... 
74 Cottage St. 

Buffalo Hospital of the Sisters of 
Charity. 

1833 Main St. 

Charity Eye, Ear, and Throat 
Hospital. 

168 Broadway. 

Children’s Hospital. 

219 Bryant St. 

City Hospital. 

859 Humboldt Parkway. 

Emergency Hospital. 

108 Pine St. 

Erie County Hospital. 

3399 Main St. 

Ernest Wende Hospital. 

Broadway and Spring St. 
German Deaconess Home and 
Hospital (Hospital Department). 
218 Kingsley St. 

German Hospital of Buffalo. 

736 Jefferson St. 

Mercy Hospital. 

955 Tifft St. 

Municipal Hospital. 

770 East Ferry St. 

St. Mary’s Maternity Hospital_ 

126 Edward St. 

U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

Fort Porter. 

U. S. Marine Hospital. 

2183 Main St. 

Canandaigua: 

Frederick Ferris Thompson Hos¬ 
pital. 

120 Main St., north. 

Cohoes: 

Cohoes Hospital. 

221 Main St. 

Cooperstown: 

Thanksgiving Hospital of Coopers¬ 
town. 

Grove St. 

Corning: 

Coming Hospital. 

163 East First St. 

Cortland: 

Cortland County Hospital. 

84 Main St. 

Dobbs Ferry: 

Dobbs Ferry Hospital. 

Ashford Ave. 

Dunkirk: 

Brooks Memorial Hospital. 

Central Ave. and Sixth St. 
East Bloomfield: 

Ontario County Tuberculosis 
Hospital. 

Elmira: 

Arnot-Ogden Memorial Hospital.. 
Roe Ave. 

Elmira Detention Hospital. 

Elmira Tuberculosis Sanatorium.. 

St. Joseph’s Hospital. 

Market St. 

Fishers Island, L. I.: 

U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

Fort H. G. Wright. 


Private corporation. 

Private association. 

Sisters of Charity. 

County of Erie. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Sisters of Charity. 

County of Erie. 

City of Buffalo. 

German Protestantchurches. 

Private corporation. 

Sisters of Mercy. 

City of Buffalo. 

Sisters of Charity. 

U. S. Government. 

U. S. Government. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

County of Ontario. 

Private corporation. 

City of Elmira. 

City of Elmira. 

Sisters of St. Joseph. 

U. S. Government.... 


General. 

General, except chronic, in¬ 
sane, and smallpox. 

Tubercular. 

General, except chronic_ 

Tubercular.. 

Incipient tubercular.. 


General, except contagious 
and incurable. 

General, except acute con¬ 
tagious. 

General. 

General. 


Eye, ear, nose, and throat... 


General. 

General, except contagious 
and insane. 

Emergency. 

General. 

Contagious. 

General. 


General, except contagious.. 

General, except contagious 
and tubercular. 

Smallpox. 

Obstetrical. 

General, except mental. 

General. 


General 


General, except alcoholic, 
contagious, and venereal. 

General. 


General, except contagious.. 

General. 

General. 

Emergency. 

Tubercular. 


General. 

Smallpox. 

Pulmonary tubercular 
General_. 


General 


1870 

1900 
1884 

1893 

1905 

1895 

1906 

1855 

1872 

1848 

1891 

1892 

1896 

1901 

0) 

1909 

1895 

1901 
1904 
0) 
1855 

( l ) 

1909 

1902 

1898 
1S66 

1900 

1891 

1899 
1898 

1910 

1888 

1896 
1909 
1908 

1902 


Yes. 

Yes. 

No. 

Yes. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

No. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

No. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

No. 

Yes. 

( 8 ) 

No. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

No. 

Yes. 

No. 

Yes. 

No. 

No. 

Yes. 

( 8 ) 


Yes. 

Yes. 


No. 


Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 


100 

45 

ISO 

62 

19 
70 

31 

365 

52 

260 

4 

70 

25 

81 

472 

150 

67 

72 

34 

50 

48 

24 
50 

60 

60 

30 

27 

25 
30 
42 

20 

80 

8 

25 

34 

17 


MEDICAL STAFF 
AT CLOSE OF 
TEAR. 

NURSES AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 

Total. 

Resident. 

Visiting. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

48 

24 

24 

26 


26 

(l) 


(i) 

12 


12 

8 

4 

4 

10 

4 

6 

(*) 


0) 

18 

1 

17 

1 


1 

1 


1 

3 

2 

1 

3 


3 

4 


4 

5 


5 

43 

10 

33 

116 

13 

103 

20 

2 

18 

20 


20 

35 

6 

29 

56 

6 

50 

18 


18 

1 

( l ) 

(») 

19 

1 

18 

22 


22 

5 

1 

4 

6 


6 

21 

4 

17 

25 

4 

21 

46 

5 

41 

58 

8 

50 

54 

3 

51 

15 


15 

36 

2 

34 

24 

2 

22 

31 

3 

28 

« 20 

2 

18 

20 

2 

18 

14 

1 

13 

1 

1 





8 


8 

10 


10 

1 

1 


(•) 

(») 






4 

3 

1 

3 

3 


7 


7 

14 


14 

7 

1 

6 

15 

1 

14 

10 

5 

5 

10 


10 

19 


19 

8 


8 

7 


7 

14 


14 

7 


7 

6 

1 

5 

14 


14 

16 


16 

1 


1 

3 


3 

16 

1 

15 

21 


21 

2 


2 

2 

1 

1 

3 


3 

1 


1 

( l ) 


C 1 ) 

15 


15 

3 

3 

10 

9 10 



1 Not reported. 

2 Included in report of Monteflore Home and Sanitarium, New York, N. Y. 

3 See New York City. 


4 Includes report of dispensary. 

* Exclusive of special appropriation for permanent improvements, 

• Includes report of German Deaconess Home. 







































































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


321 


SANITARIUMS: 1910—Continued. 



RECEIPTS DURING 

YEAR. 


PAYMENTS DURING 



Derived from— 










For 

Total. 





Total. 

running 


Appro- 

Dona- 

Care of 

Other 


ex- 


pria- 

tions. 

tions. 

patients. 

sources. 


penses. 

$35,879 

$4,878 

$3,201 

$26,192 

$1,608 

$35,143 

$34,059 

14,078 

1,784 

473 

9,052 

2,769 

12,819 

11,538 

( j ) 


(*) 

( 2 > 

( j ) 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

18,692 

13,750 


4,942 


18,350 

17,566 

5,680 

5,000 


580 

100 

5,679 

5,276 

c i ) 

( i ) 

0) 

o) 

(>) 

( i ) 

( i ) 

15,844 

486 

1,519 

8,802 

5,037 

16,795 

16,795 

117,271 

28,591 

3,200 

62,127 

23,353 

119,922 

118,533 

21,780 

2,348 

1,951 

14,244 

3,237 

21,698 

21,698 

68,500 

17,915 

1,484 

41,360 

7,741 

61,483 

56,825 

2,348 

2,125 

23 

196 

4 

2,258 

2,258 

26,234 

8,473 

4,282 

6,505 

6,974 

26,234 

26,234 

4,742 

859 


3,883 


4,562 

4,417 

38,682 

13,075 

4,952 

19,466 

1,189 

37,685 

36,337 

116,045 

114,493 


1,552 


128,559 

126,401 

5 50,646 

& 25,000 


25,646 


64,853 

42,071 

«53,792 

3,845 

1,314 

28,493 

20,140 

«46,634 

46,634 

<81,287 

10,689 

52,115 

11,634 

6,849 

< 78,214 

73,765 

11,070 

3,250 

47 

5,384 

2,389 

10,348 

10,091 

2,624 

2,600 


24 


4,340 

4,340 

c) 

0 

n 

( 7 ) 

c 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

0) 

0) 


(*) 


0) 

0) 

21,988 

21,988 



21,988 

0) 

35,626 

24,000 

11,542 

84 

35,626 

33,864 

4 13,332 

4,808 

883 

7,361 

280 

< 13,894 

13,894 

14,586 

350 

1,126 

6,184 

6,926 

12,514 

12,374 

16,767 

1,200 

2,155 

8,429 

4,983 

16,767 

15,870 

9,220 


1,233 

6,379 

1,608 

9,579 

9,579 

13,963 

500 

8,282 

4,864 

317 

13,117 

12,588 

13,016 

1,656 

3,500 

7,560 

300 

12,691 

11,491 

5,276 

5,000 

16 

260 


5,300 

5,000 

39,402 

6,624 

570 

11,078 

21,130 

34,011 

34,011 

350 

350 




350 

300 

5,600 

5,500 


100 


5,600 

5,600 

13j 794 

1,134 

12,660 


14;390 

11'194 

(>) 

o 


0) 


(>) 

(>) 


YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

$1,084 

$151,255 

$100,000 

$51,255 

1,281 

72,220 

39,697 

32,523 

( 2 > 

( j > 

( j ) 

(*> 

784 

60,880 

60,880 


403 

10,000 

10,000 


0) 

0) 

(■) 

0) 


228,103 

126,012 

102,091 

1,389 

1,076,372 

559,642 

516,730 


74,940 

35,000 

39,940 

4,658 

210,000 

210,000 



1,200 

1,200 



265,493 

160,686 

104,807 

145 

14,795 

12,140 

2,655 

1,348 

« 114,654 

114,654 


2,158 

702,158 

702,158 

\ 

22,782 

91,963 

69,000 

22,963 


6 123,200 

115,100 

8,100 

4,449 

< 80,579 

80,579 


257 

34,223 

34,223 



85,365 

85,365 


( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 


o) 

(») 

o) 


o> 

0) 

0) 


1,762 

142,913 

137,613 

5,300 


< 50,000 

50,000 


140 

76,208 

28,000 

48,208 

897 

70,000 

60,000 

10,000 


0) 

0) 


529 

55,893 

50,893 

5,000 

1,200 

185,000 

85,000 

100,000 

300 

15,000 

15,000 



694,804 

188,362 

506,442 

50 

8,000 

8,000 



16,000 

16, (MX) 


3,196 

50,000 

5o;ooo 


(>) 

0) 

(») 



PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING YEAR. 


PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 


Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Adults 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

917 

449 

468 

37 

21 

16 

34 

3 

487 

244 

243 

31 

11 

20 

26 

5 

579 

354 

225 

179 

107 

72 

172 

7 

455 

246 

209 

22 

14 

s 

19 

3 

42 

20 

22 

9 

5 

4 

7 

2 

100 

0) 

(*) 

60 

35 

25 

60 


293 

126 

167 

19 

10 

9 

19 


3,355 

1,761 

1,594 

214 

119 

95 

187 

27 

856 

0) 

(») 

38 

15 

23 

34 

4 

2,182 

1,046 

1,136 

139 

71 

68 

139 


8,480 

(») 

( i ) 

(*) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

Q) 

490 

269 

221 

43 

19 

24 

1 

42 

126 

42 

84 

23 

9 

14 

22 

1 

1,443 

1,287 

156 

57 

44 

13 

55 

2 

1,850 

1,429 

421 

413 

304 

109 

397 

16 

992 

499 

493 

37 

15 

22 

10 

27 

1,153 

425 

728 

42 

11 

31 

40 

2 

859 

532 

327 

53 

26 

27 

46 

7 

481 

278 

203 

28 

13 

15 

28 


12 

5 

7 






313 


313 

* 18 


18 

18 


370 

370 


4 

4 


4 


450 

450 


26 

26 


26 


539 

229 

310 

45 

14 

31 

45 


399 

216 

183 

34 

21 

13 

29 

5 

323 

150 

173 

21 

9 

12 

21 


365 

169 

196 

24 

12 

12 

23 

1 

373 

0) 

0) 

12 

5 

7 

12 


377 

235 

142 

10 

5 

5 

8 

2 

299 

156 

143 

21 

14 

7 

21 


48 

20 

28 

16 

2 

14 

15 

1 

827 

413 

414 

40 

16 

24 

36 

4 

68 

( l ) 

(>> 

16 

6 

10 

16 


467 

299 

168 

27 

12 

15 

25 

2 

342 

342 


11 

11 


11 









10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 

21 

22 

23 

24 

25 

26 

27 

28 

29 

30 

31 

32 

33 

34 

35 

36 

37 

38 

39 

40 

41 

42 

43 

44 

45 


7 Included in report of St. Mary's Infant Asylum, 
s Instruction for Hospital Corps. 


* Enlisted men, Hospital Corps. 
10 Exclusive of out-patients. 


44153°—14-21 







































































































































































322 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table IV.— HOSPITALS AND 







t-t 

a 

1 


MEDICAL STAFF 
AT CLOSE OF 

NURSES AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 

% 





*—* 
o 

a 


1 LAK. 




a 

3 

a 

NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of cases treated. 

i 

o . 

fC} c n 

O L 

CO oo 

3 • 

1 

fx 

V-f 







O 

3 




§ 

£ 

tm el 

a 

<D 

O 

■8 

O 

(h 

s 

rO 


fl 

a 



s 

■P 

CO 




M 

8 

a 

2 

O 

a 

3 

C3 

o 

8 

•S3 

cS 

■+-> 

O 

& 

*3 

s 

O) 

P 

►H 





E-i 

6 

s 

e 

fit 

> 

£h 

a 



NEW YORK—Continued. 














Fort Terry, L. I.: 











25 


46 

U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

U. S. Govprnm^nt . 

General. 

1901 

(>) 

Yes. 

30 

2 

2 


5 


Fu£ton: 





16 

8 


8 

47 

Fulton City Hospital. 

City of Fulton. 

General. 

1910 

Yes. 

Yes. 

25 

16 



South Fourth St. 










Geneva: 









6 

20 


20 

48 

Geneva Citv Hospital... 

Private norporat.ion. 

General. 

1898 

Yes. 

Yes. 

53 

6 



198 North St.* 










Glens Falls: 









( 3 ) 



18 

49 

Glens Falls Hospital. 

Privat.fi corporation. 

General. 

1897 

Yes. 

Yes. 

75 

( 3 ) 

10 

18 


Park St. 








Gloversville: 







( 3 ) 


( 3 ) 

12 


12 

50 

Nathan Littauer Hospital. 

Privat.fi corporation. 

General, except chronic and 
contagious. 

1894 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

1 


15 High St. 







Goshen: 












1 

51 

Goshen Emorgenoy Hospital.... 


Emergency, except infec¬ 
tious. 

1908 

No. 

Yes. 

2 

4 


4 

1 


Main St. 










Greenport, L. I.: 








( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

52 

Eastern Long Island Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1905 

No. 

Yes. 

20 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

Manor Place, Sterling'Harbor. 




Haverstraw: 









6 




53 

New York State Hospital for Crip¬ 
pled and Deformed Children. 

State of New York. 

Crippled and deformed. 

1900 

No. 

Yes. 

45 

7 

1 

4 


4 










West Haverstraw P. 0. 














Herkimer: 









18 




54 

Herkimer Emergency Hospital.... 
409 North Washington St. 

Private corporation 

General, except chronic and 
contagious. 

1901 

No. 

Yes. 

10 

18 


3 


3 








Hornell: 








6 



8 

55 

St. James Mercy Hospital. 

Sisters of Mercy.., 

General, except contagious.. 

1890 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

6 


9 

1 

Canisteo St" 







Hudson: 










12 


12 

56 

Hudson City Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious, 
insane, and obstetrical. 

1889 

Yes. 

Yes. 

32 

9 


9 


Prospect Ave? 








Ilion: 








12 




57 

Ilion Hospital... 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious 
and tubercular. 

1906 

No. 

Yes. 

20 

12 


4 


4 

West‘Main St. 








Ithaca: 









( 3 ) 




58 

Cornell Infirmary. 

Cornell University. 

General. 

1898 

No. 

Yes. 

50 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

4 


4 

Sage Place. 



( 3 ) 




59 

Ithaca City Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1890 

No. 

Yes. 

57 

( 3 ) 


28 


28 

426 North Aurora St. 






Jamestown: 









( 3 ) 




60 

Woman's Christian Association 

Woman’s Christian Associa- 

General, except contagious 

1885 

Yes. 

( 3 ) 

65 

( 3 ) 


24 


24 


Hospital. 

tion. 

and insane. 











Foote Ave. 














Kingston: 













61 

Benedictine Sanitarium. 

Sisters of St. Benedict. 

General, except contagious 
and mental. 

1901 

Yes. 

Yes. 

42 

10 

1 

9 

18 


18 

St. Mary Ave. 



62 

City Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1891 

Yes. 

Yes. 

30 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

11 

7 


7 

400 Broadway. 







Lake Kush aqua: 













63 

Stony Wold Sanatorium. 

Private corporation. 

Incipient tubercular. 

1901 

No. 

No. 

106 

12 

3 

9 

5 


5 

Lestershire: 







64 

Lestershire-Endicott Union Hos- 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1906 

No. 

Yes. 

11 

6 


6 

4 


4 

pital. 







16 Avenue A. 














Liberty: 













65 

Loomis Sanatorium. 

Private corporation. 

Tubercular. 

1895 

Yes. 

No. 

185 

19 

6 

13 

16 


16 

Loomis P. O. 




66 

Workmen’s Circle Sanatorium.... 

Workmen’s Circle. 

Pulmonary tubercular. 

1910 

No. 

No. 

72 

3 

2 

1 

2 


2 

Little Falls: 









67 

Little Falls Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except chronic and 
contagious. 

1892 

Yes. 

Yes. 

25 

( 3 ) 


( 3 ) 

10 


10 

Burwell and Whitehead Sts. 





Matteawan: 












68 

Highland Hospital. 

Private association. 

General. 

1871 

No. 

No. 

25 

16 

6 

10 

6 

1 

5 

Middletown: 





69 

Thrall Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1887 

Yes. 

Yes. 

43 

12 


12 

12 


12 

19 Grove St. 






Mineola, L. I.: 













70 

Nassau Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1896 

Yes. 

Yes. 

71 

12 

3 

9 

24 


24 

Mount Hope: 




71 

Otisville Sanatorium. 

City of New York. 

Tubercular. 

1906 

No. 

Yes. 

413 

8 


1 

21 

6 

15 

Otisville P. 0. 






Mount Vernon: 













72 

Mount Vernon Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1890 

Yes. 

Yes. 

35 

24 

1 

23 

14 


14 

North Seventh Ave. 





New Rochelle: 













73 

New Rochelle Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except alcoholic, 
contagious, and insane. 

1892 

Yes. 

Yes. 

61 

8 

2 

6 

16 


16 


Guion St. 




74 

U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

( 3 ) 

0) 

Yes. 

120 

5 

5 


60 

3 60 


Fort Slocum. 








New York City: 














Bronx and Manhattan Boroughs — 













75 

Babies’ Hospital of the City of 
New York. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

( 3 ) 

No. 

Yes. 

75 

16 

3 

13 

36 


36 






135 East Fifty-fifth St. 













76 

Bellevue Hospital. 

City of New York. 

General. 

1812 

Yes. 

Yes. 

1,225 

95 

64 

31 

252 

14 

238 


First Ave*. and Twenty-sixth 
St. 

Beth David Hospital. 



77 

Federation of Russian Polish 

General, except chronic and 
contagious. 

1886 

Yes. 

Yes. 

17 

25 

1 

24 

6 


6 

246 East Eigfity-second St. 

Hebrews of America. 



1 Instruction for Hospital Corps. * Not reported. 

3 Enlisted men, Hospital Corps. * Equipment. 


















































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


323 


SANITARIUMS: 1910—Continued. 


PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING YEAR. 

PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE 

OF YEAR. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Adults 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

483 

483 


4 

4 


4 


15« 

88 

68 

12 

6 

6 

12 


570 

206 

364 

26 

15 

11 

24 

2 

425 

234 

191 

28 

14 

14 

26 

2 

591 

240 

351 

26 

11 

15 

25 

1 

62 

47 

15 






( 8 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

(») 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

80 

42 

38 

47 

29 

18 


47 

125 

58 

67 

5 

3 

2 

5 


476 

219 

257 

25 

10 

15 

25 


309 

200 

109 

19 

13 

6 

17 

2 

251 

96 

155 

11 

3 

8 

10 

1 

837 

(») 

( 3 ) 

35 

(*) 

(») 

35 


795 

(») 

(*) 

49 

21 

28 

38 

11 

1,197 

519 

678 

32 

14 

18 

29 

3 

587 

270 

317 

30 

13 

17 

25 

5 

453 

266 

187 

11 

6 

5 

11 


242 

13 

229 

98 

7 

91 

76 

22 

178 

112 

66 

6 

2 

4 

6 


580 

290 

290 

169 

( 8 ) 

(*) 

166 

3 

98 

88 

10 

68 

62 

6 

68 


308 

165 

143 

5 

2 

3 

5 


205 

121 

84 

9 

5 

4 

9 


472 

255 

217 

24 

14 

10 

21 

3 

960 

575 

385 

38 

21 

17 

38 


1,051 

721 

330 

375 

241 

134 

326 

49 

805 

455 

350 

20 

14 

6 

18 

2 

704 

359 

345 

30 

13 

17 

22 

8 

3 1 9 fi 

3 1 ‘26 


64 

64 


64 


1 34q 

8Q4 

455 

55 

28 

27 


55 

40,227 

27,013 

13,214 

1,106 

707 

399 

1,013 

93 

358 

146 

212 

16 

4 

12 

14 

2 



RECEIPTS DURING 

YEAR. 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 

Value of property at 

CLOSE OF YEAR. 

2 



Derived from— 




For 


Land, 


B 

3 

fl 







For 

perma- 


build- 

In- 

p 

0 

Total. 





Total. 

running 

nent 

Total. 

mgs, 

vested 



Appro- 

Dona- 

Care of 

Other 


ex- 

im- 


and 

funds. 



pria- 

tions. 

tions. 

patients. 

sources. 


penses. 

prove- 

ments. 


equip¬ 

ment. 


i 

HH 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


( 3 ) 


( 3 ) 

( 3 > 

c) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


46 

$5,286 

$1,500 


$3,786 


$5,103 

$4,583 

$520 

$40,000 

$40,000 


47 

17,754 

1,328 

$441 

12,483 

$3,502 

18,757 

17,343 

1,414 

110,984 

55,000 

$55,984 

48 

69,801 


54,614 

12,311 

2,876 

74,135 

15,357 

58,778 

112,783 

102,833 

9,950 

49 

14,938 

476 

1,772 

11,057 

1,633 

14,780 

14,566 

214 

111,000 

75,000 

36,000 

50 

1,148 


624 

499 

25 

1,430 

1,430 


1,300 

* 800 

500 

51 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

< 8 ) 

( 3 ) 

52 

22,729 

20,000 



2,729 

22,614 

19,885 

2,729 

56,542 

56,542 


53 

3,972 

1,500 

17 

2,406 

49 

3,957 

3,957 

13,300 

11,800 

1,500 

54 

12,787 

3,036 

1,000 

8,747 

4 

13,627 

13,627 


31,000 

31,000 

55 

14,139 

2,300 

2,247 

4,847 

4,745 

13,543 

13,543 


72,380 

36,200 

36,180 

56 

6,334 

1,300 

199 

4,816 

19 

9,116 

9,116 


47,887 

47,887 


57 

24,266 



19,168 

5,098 

14,338 

(3) 

( 8 ) 

197,160 

67,259 

129,901 

58 

34,310 


900 

28,432 

4,978 

33,240 

33,240 

52,900 

27,500 

25,400 

59 

22,739 

683 

4,960 

16,806 

290 

25,334 

18,522 

6,812 

75,000 

75,000 

60 

15,368 

1,131 

17 

12,398 

1,822 

14,246 

14,246 


82,000 

82,000 


61 

13,721 

5,343 

1,148 

6,433 

797 

13,333 

13,333 


48,400 

30,000 

18,400 

62 

79,752 


18,088 

49,354 

12,310 

79,630 

72,896 

6,734 

361,242 

334,733 

26,509 

63 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 8 ) 

64 

6 210,853 


2,858 

204,259 

3,736 

5 220,042 

198,388 

21,654 

5 519,903 

479,371 

40,532 

65 

57,993 


57,993 



60,396 

34,088 

26,308 

40,397 

40,397 


66 

11,756 

1,200 

3,543 

6,378 

635 

9,070 

8,970 

100 

41,000 

35,000 

6,000 

67 

8,049 


3,971 

2,106 

1,972 

8,766 

8,766 


43,166 

24,853 

18,313 

68 

20,827 


388 

12,322 

8,117 

15,272 

14,655 

617 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

60,891 

69 

49,672 


8,481 

30,887 

10,304 

56,336 

56,336 


146,492 

104,992 

41,500 

70 

225,539 

225,539 


252,856 

177,984 

74,872 

(8) 

(3) 

71 

6 22,895 

6,500 

2,971 

11,471 

1,953 

5 22,785 

22,785 


5 39,000 

39,000 


72 

33,502 

1,875 

20,916 

9,465 

1,246 

23,445 

20,591 

2,854 

126,500 

125,000 

1,500 

73 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 


( 8 ) 


( s ) 

( 8 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 


74 

90,275 

6,505 

62,393 

4,388 

16,989 

142,631 

48,500 

94,131 

548,631 

365,613 

183,018 

75 

61,186,461 

61,186,461 




7 1,444,608 

733,833 

710,775 

7 5,000,000 

5,000,000 


76 

4,998 

840 

2,145 

1,958 

55 

4,824 

4,824 


28,000 

28,000 


77 


7 Includes report of out-patient department and Tuberculosis Camp. 


6 ,Includes report of dispensary. 

5 Appropriation to Department of Bellevue and Allied Hospitals, 


































































































































324 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table IV.— HOSPITALS AND 


78 

79 

80 
81 

82 

83 

84 

85 

86 

87 

88 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


NEW YORK—Continued. 

New York City— Continued. 

Bronx and Manhattan Boroughs —Con. 

Beth Israel Hospital. 

66 Jefierson St. 

City Hospital. 

Blackwell’s Island. 

Columbus Hospital. 

226 East Twentieth St. 

Flower Hospital. 

Sixty-third St. and Eastern 
Boulevard. 

Fordham Hospital. 

Crotona Ave. and Southern 
Boulevard. 

French Hospital. 

450 West Thirty-fourth St. 

General Memorial Hospital. 

One hundred and sixth St. and 
Central Park, west. 

German Hospital. 

112 East Seventy-seventh St. 

Gouverneur Hospital. 

Gouverneur St. 

Hahnemann Hospital of the City 
of New York. 

657 Park Ave. 

Har Moriah Hospital. 

138 Second St. 


89 

90 

91 

92 

93 

94 

95 

96 

97 

98 

99 

100 

101 

102 

103 

104 

105 

106 

107 


Harlem Eye, Ear, and Throat In¬ 
firmary. 

2099 Lexington Ave. 

Harlem Hospital. 

One hundred and thirty-sixth 
St. and Lenox Ave. 

Hospital for the Ruptured and 
Crippled. 

135 East Forty-second St. 

House of Relief. 

67 Hudson St. 

Italian Hospital. 

165 West Houston St. 

J. Hood Wright Memorial Hospital 
503 West One hundred and 
thirty-first St. 

Jewish Hospital for Deformities 
and Joint Diseases. 

1915 Madison Ave. 

Jewish Maternity Hospital. 

270 East Broadway. 

Laura Franklin Free Hospital for 
Children. 

17 East One hundred and 
eleventh St. 

Lebanon Hospital. 

Westchester and Cauldwell 
Aves. 

Lincoln Hospital and Home. 

East One hundred and forty- 
first St. and Southern Boule¬ 
vard. 

Lying-in Hospital of the City of 
New York. 

307 Second Ave. 

Manhattan Eye, Ear, and Throat 
Hospital. 

210 East Sixty-fourth St. 
Manhattan Maternity and Dispen¬ 
sary. 

327 East Sixtieth St. 

Metropolitan Hospital. 

Blackwell’s Island. 

Mintum Hospital. 

East Sixteenth St. 

Misericordia Hospital 8 . 

531 East Eighty-sixth St. 

Montefiore Home. 

Onehundred and thirty-eighth 
St. and Broadway. 

Mount Sinai Hospital of the City 
of New York. 

Fifth Ave. and One hundredth 


108 

109 

110 


St. 

Neurological Institute of New Y ork 
149 East Sixty-seventh st. 

New Amsterdam Eye and Ear 
Hospital. 

230 West Thirty-eighth St. 
New York City Children’s Hospi¬ 
tals and Schools. 

Randall’s Island. 


Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of cases treated. 

-d 

© 

TJ 

0 

0 

O 

(-4 

c3 

© 

Training school for 

nurses. 

Colored patients re¬ 

ceived. 

Number of beds. 

MEDICAL STAFF 
AT CLOSE OF 
YEAR. 

NURSES AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 

*3 

o 

H 

■4-5 

0 

© 

32 

© 

.9 

■*-> 

3 

> 

O 

H 

© 

13 

3 

© 

i 

© 

Beth Israel Hospital Associa- 

General, except chronic and 

1895 

Yes. 

Yes. 

107 

40 

15 

25 

44 

4 

40 

tion. 

contagious. 











Department of Public Char- 

General, except contagious 

1858 

Yes. 

Yes. 

782 

55 

28 

27 

109 

3 

106 

ities. 

and insane. 











Missionary Sisters of the 

General. 

1892 

No. 

Yes. 

125 

28 

5 

23 

19 

9 

10 

Sacred Heart. 












New York Homeopathic 

General, except contagious.. 

1860 

Yes. 

Yes. 

140 

51 

9 

42 

45 


45 

Medical College. 












City of New York. 

General. 

1891 

Yes. 

Yes. 

152 

17 

9 

8 

44 


44 

French Benevolent Society. 

General, except chronic and 

1809 

Yes. 

Yes. 

115 

11 

5 

6 

32 


32 


contagious. 











Private corporation. 

Surgical. 

1884 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

11 

3 

8 

29 

2 

27 

Private corporation. 

General, except maternity.. 

1861 

Yes. 

Yes. 

265 

58 

15 

43 

100 

17 

83 

City of New York. 

General. 

1885 

No. 

Yes. 

170 

26 

10 

16 

37 


37 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1869 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

4 

4 


43 

2 

41 

Federation of Galician and 

General, except contagious.. 

1908 

Yes. 

Yes. 

42 

26 

6 

20 

i 16 

2 

14 

Bukowinan Jews in 












America. 












Private corporation. 

Eye, ear, and throat .. 

1881 

No. 

Yes. 

10 

8 


8 

1 


1 

City of New York. 

General. 

1886 

No. 

Yes. 

188 

26 

10 

16 

56 


56 

Private corporation. 

Ruptured and crippled. 

1862 

No. 

Yes. 

250 

15 

3 

12 

18 


18 

Society of the New York 

General. 

1875 

No. 

Yes. 

56 

10 

6 

4 

10 


10 

Hospital. 












Italian Benevolent Institute. 

General, except chronic and 

1901 

Yes. 

Yes. 

48 

17 

3 

14 

18 


18 


contagious. 











Private corporation. 

General. 

1S62 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

15 

5 

10 

20 

6 

14 

Private corporation. 

Deformity and orthopedic.. 

1905 

No. 

Yes. 

48 

( 6 ) 

(*) 

50 

10 

2 

8 

Private corporation. 

Maternity_. 

1906 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

26 

3 

23 

20 


20 

Private corporation. 

General. 

^1888 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

29 

1 

28 

10 


10 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1893 

Yes. 

Yes. 

196 

39 

12 

27 

55 

5 

50 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious, 

1839 

Yes. 

Yes. 

422 

35 

8 

27 

57 

7 

50 


insane, and tubercular. 











Private corporation. 

Obstetrical. 

1798 

Yes. 

Yes. 

196 

28 

17 

11 

58 


58 

Private corporation. 

Eye, ear, and throat... 

1869 

No. 

Yes. 

150 

‘ 128 

10 

118 

1 43 


43 

Private corporation. 

Maternity. 

1901 

Yes. 

Yes. 

26 

7 

1 

6 

15 


15 

City of New York. 

General. 

1875 

Yes. 

Yes. 

1,382 


23 

53 

144 

7 

137 

Private organization. 

Scarlet fever and diphtheria 

1S97 

Yes. 

Yes. 

44 

7 

1 

6 

23 


23 

Sisters of Misericorde. 

General. 

1887 

Yes. 

Yes. 

390 

18 

1 

17 

30 


30 

Private corporation. 

Chronic. 

1884 

No. 

No. 

293 

33 

8 

25 

40 

19 

21 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1852 

Yes. 

Yes. 

500 

105 

32 

73 

221 

18 

203 

Private corporation. 

Neurotic. 

1910 

No. 

Yes. 

85 


4 

3 

38 

3 

35 

Private corporation. 

Eye, ear, nose, and throat.... 

1888 

No. 

Yes. 

18 

1 

i 


2 


2 

City of New York. 

General. 

1868 

No. 

Yes. 

1,768 

38 

3 

35 

60 


60 













1 Includes report of dispensary. 

1 Included in appropriation to Department of Bellevue and Allied Hospitals. 
3 Includes report of out-patient department. 

* Includes report of out-patient department and Tuberculosis Camp. 

6 Exclusive of out-patients. ' 









































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


325 


SANITARIUMS: 1910—Continued. 


PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING YEAR. 

PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 

RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Adults 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

Total. 

Appro¬ 

pria¬ 

tions. 

Derivec 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

from— 

Care of 
patients. 

Other 

sources. 

1,990 

1,000 

990 

99 

52 

47 

82 

17 

'$122,965 

$32,518 

$71,686 

$8,027 

$10,734 

8,436 

6,052 

2,384 

792 

506 

286 

792 


233,039 

233,039 




1,696 

1,142 

554 

98 

75 

23 

89 

9 

131,357 

9,277 

7,469 

9,819 

4,792 

4,140 

2,467 

1,673 

129 

• 70 

59 

121 

8 

173,862 

31,016 

18,746 

27,058 

97,042 

3,433 

2,040 

1,393 

143 

87 

56 

107 

36 

( 2 1 

( 2 1 




1,603 

903 

700 

78 

44 

34 

78 

i 78,721 

1,757 

4,194 

55,528 

17,242 

1,069 

315 

754 

43 

17 

26 

43 


1 91,295 


5,343 

49,410 

36,542 

3,847 

1,915 

1,932 

264 

146 

118 

252 

12 

i 222,101 

28,382 

39,987 

80,784 

72,948 

4,762 

3,033 

1,729 

107 

70 

37 

88 

19 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 




1,209 

332 

877 

56 

22 

34 

49 

7 

58,576 

741 

53,904 

3,931 

921 

441 

480 

32 

15 

17 

29 

3 

i 45,878 

791 

12,327 

6,500 

26,260 

9 48 

16 

32 

( 8 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 8 ) 

(•) 

( 6 ) 

6,146 


2,956 

25 

3,165 

6,325 

3,334 

2,991 

156 

68 

88 

127 

29 

( 2 1 

(2) 




1,217 

647 

570 

194 

88 

106 

ii 

183 

1 77,295 

22,637 

14,791 

15,008 

24,859 

2,792 

2,365 

427 

33 

25 

8 

c 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 7 ) 


C) 

2 7,978 

(’) 

944 

535 

409 

35 

20 

15 

32 

3 

'62,548 

3,674 

23,719 

14,085 

21,070 

1,295 

749 

546 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

47 

(*) 

i 37,795 

11,445 

9,947 

6,291 

10,112 

208 

106 

102 

45 

19 

26 

21 

24 

i 39,756 

3,931 

29,698 

4,651 

1,476 

1,104 


1,104 

38 


38 

38 


31,352 

5,726 

4,644 

4,355 

16,627 

774 

363 

411 

54 

29 

25 


54 

15 049 

15,049 

3,665 

1,973 

1,692 

138 

86 

52 

121 

17 

i 127,430 

27,320 

31,964 

28,564 

39,582 

3,055 

1,754 

1,301 

312 

( 8 ) 

(«) 

(•) 

(«) 

i 175,211 

68,516 

25,011 

8,326 

73,358 

2,472 


2, 472 

98 


98 

98 


157,822 

20,083 

10S,423 

7,474 

21,842 

5,706 

2,802 

2,904 

126 

58 

68 

94 

32 

i 147,736 

10,369 

45,061 

50,739 

41,567 

1,489 


1,489 

14 


14 

14 


30,090 


19,581 

4,903 

5,606 

10 155 

7 855 

2,300 

1,443 

1 148 

295 

1,364 

79 

434 348 

434,348 

209 

85 

124 

33 

23 

10 

28 

5 

30,835 

810 


28,438 

1,587 

1,243 

365 

878 

375 

105 

270 

172 

203 

166,228 

22, SS3 

8,172 

3,780 

131,393 

548 

362 

1S6 

293 

179 

114 

279 

14 

9 5S6,843 


io 429,253 

5,978 

151,612 

7,613 

3,761 

3,852 

417 

190 

227 

352 

65 

i 741,120 

i 73,554 

i 287,025 

154,799 

i 225,742 

825 

361 

464 

72 

48 

24 

69 

3 

153,467 


80,176 

61,072 

12,219 

284 

147 

137 

3 

3 


3 


8,305 

250 

4,403 

643 

3,009 

2,686 

1,542 

1,144 

1,576 

879 

697 

439 

1,137 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 





PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. || 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

$116,215 

$116,215 


' $355,000 

$355,000 


78 

233,099 

233,099 


1,400,000 

1,400,000 


79 

1 36,461 

36,461 


'194,000 

194,000 


80 

176,329 

155,444 

$20,885 

934,191 

488,199 

$445,992 

81 

2 120,284 

3119,454 

830 

2 767,716 

767,716 


82 

1 77,732 

77,732 


' 400,000 

400,000 


83 

'90,069 

71,134 

18,935 

' 1,232,770 

1,000,000 

232,770 

84 

'215,066 

215,066 


' 1,348,378 

747,287 

601,091 

85 

4 148,434 

4 145,699 

2,735 

4 915,000 

915,000 


86 

86,260 

86,260 


182,717 

97,017 

85,700 

87 

' 43,407 

43,407 


'70,500 

69,000 

1,500 

88 

3,507 

2,861 

646 

64,262 

62,000 

2,262 

89 

3139,867 

3 139,834 

33 

U,017,816 

1,017,816 


90 

' 104,206 

104,206 


'1,150,482 

664,757 

485,725 

91 

7 43,349 

43,349 


7 394,715 

394,715 


92 

'59,510 

59,510 


'153,680 

143,993 

9,687 

93 

' 37,551 

37,551 


' 113,500 

94,000 

19,500 

94 

' 39,900 

33,700 

6,200 

' 70,329 

70,329 


95 

31,101 

31,101 


101,100 

101,100 


96 

15,049 

14,190 

859 

150,000 

150,000 


97 

' 108,381 

108,381 


' 246,200 

246,200 


98 

' 136,875 

115,740 

21,135 

' 760,513 

533,376 

227,137 

99 

148,441 

135,068 

13,373 

1,971,499 

1,602,204 

369,295 

100 

' 136,511 

136,511 


'901,819 

713,314 

188,505 

101 

37,911 

37,070 

841 

232,141 

129,313 

102,828 

102 

434 348 

434 348 


3,700,000 

3,700,000 


103 

23,130 

23,130 


( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

30,000 

104 

135,147 

45,740 

89,407 

431,832 

431,832 


105 

9 421,007 

162,593 

25S, 414 

8 2,016,425 

910,000 

1,106,425 

106 

' 703,930 

i 410,669 

293,261 

' 2,564,225 

2,146,845 

' 417,380 

107 

113,442 

113 442 





108 

S 452 

8 452 


75,000 

75,000 


109 

28,479 

28,479 


6,000,000 

6,000,000 


110 







1 The House of Relief and its dispensary are supported from general fund of the Society of the New York Hospital; finances here given include only these two branches. 

8 Includes report of St. Mary of the Angels Orphanage, Hartsdale, N. Y. 

9 Includes report of Montefiore Home County Sanitarium, Bedford Hills, N. Y. 
i<> Includes $204,325 donated to building fund. 
























































































































326 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table IV.— HOSPITALS AND 







u 

o 

£ 


MEDICAL STAFF 

NURSES AT CLOSE 









AT CLOSE 

O F 

OF YEAR. 

JS 





o 

2 

W 

$ 

& 

YEAR. 





fl 

G 

NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of cases treated. 

i 

o . 

'S 
w £ 

& 

3-6 
■£ ® 







o 

•H 

a 

HH 




§ 

O 

f-4 

a 

© 

>< 

bo a 

1 

.a 

3 

t-H 

O 

© 

(h 

o 

'o 

O 

S-i 

© 

& 

a 

3 

£ 

73 

+5 

O 

H 

■*-» 

fl 

© 

TJ 

8 

P5 

tub 

3 

3 

> 

*3 

o 

H 

© 

73 

a 

73 

a 

© 

Pm 


NEW YORK-Continued. 














New York City—C ontinued. 

Bronx and. Manhattan Boroughs —Con. 









96 

50 

8 

42 

111 

New York Eyeand Ear Infirmary.. 
218 Second Ave. 

Private corporation. 

Eye and ear. 

1820 

Yes. 

Yes. 

175 

102 

6 




14 

15 

110 


110 

112 

New York Hospital. 

Society of the New York 
Hospital. 

General. 

1771 

Yes. 

Yes. 

259 

29 


8 West Sixteenth St. 




8 

13 

27 


27 

113 

New York Infirmary for Women 
and Children. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1853 

Yes. 

Yes. 

97 

21 











321 East Fifteenth St. 









24 

18 


18 

114 

New York Medical College and 
Hospital for Women. 

Private corporation. 

General.. 

1863 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

26 

2 











19 West One hundred and 














first St. 








9 

22 

80 


80 

115 

New York Nursery and Child’s 
Hospital (Hospital Department). 

Private corporation _ _ 

General.. 

1854 

No. 

Yes. 

390 

31 










571 Lexington Ave. 









24 




116 

New York Ophthalmic and Aural 
Institute. 

Private corporation. 

Eye and ear. 

1869 

No. 

Yes. 

31 

25 

1 

7 


7 










46 East Twelfth St. 












16 

117 

New York Ophthalmic Hospital... 
201 East Twenty-third St. 

Private corporation._ 

Eye, ear, and throat.. 

1852 

No. 

Yes. 

80 

50 

2 

48 

16 






10 


10 

118 

New York Orthopedic Hospital.... 
126 East Fifty-ninth St. 

Private corporation. 

Orthopedic. 

1866 

No. 

Yes. 

70 

6 

2 

4 






(») 




119 

New York Pasteur Institute. 

New York Bacteriological 
Institute. 

Hydrophobic.. 

1889 

No. 

Yes. 

(») 

(•) 

2 

1 


1 

361 West Twenty-third St. 



49 


45 

120 

New York Polyclinic Medical 
School and Hospital. 

New York Polyclinic.... 

General. 

1881 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

180 

5 

175 

4 









214 East Thirty-fourth St. 












98 

121 

New York Post Graduate Medical 
School and Hospital. 

Private corporation 

General, except chronic and 
contagious. 

1882 

Yes. 

Yes. 

222 

14 

14 


98 









303 East Twentieth St. 











18 

122 

New York Red Cross Hospital. 

New York Red Cross So- 

General. 

1894 

Yes. 

No. 

50 

15 

2 

13 

18 


395 Central Park, west. 

ciety. 






14 

123 

New York Skin and Cancer Hos- 

Private corporation. 

Skin and cancer. 

1882 

Yes. 

Yes. 

65 

20 

4 

16 

16 

2 

pital. 

Second Ave. and Nineteenth 
St. 

New York Throat, Nose, and 














124 

Private corporation. 

Throat, nose, eye, ear, and 
lung. 

1891 

No. 

Yes. 

50 

59 

1 

58 

7 

1 

6 

Lung Hospital. 







125 

231 East Fifty-seventh St. 
Philanthropin Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1905 

Yes. 

Yes. 

25 

28 

1 

27 

10 


10 

2076 Fifth Ave.* 







120 

126 

Presbyterian Hospital. 

Private corporation... 

General.... 

1868 

Yes. 

Yes. 

237 

43 

17 

26 

120 


41* East Seventieth St. 




32 

127 

Riverside Hospital. 

City of New York. 

Contagious. 

1884 

No. 

Yes. 

350 

9 

5 

4 

32 


North Brother Island. 







86 

128 

Roosevelt Hospital. 

Private corporation_ 

General, except chronic. 

1864 

Yes. 

Yes. 

254 

34 

16 

18 

104 

18 

430 West Fifty-ninth St. 




1 

129 

St. Andrew’s Convalescent Hos- 

St. John Baptist Sisterhood 

Convalescent women and 

1887 

No 

No. 

28 

7 


7 

1 



pital. 

(Episcopal). 

children. 












237 East Seventeenth St. 











8 

130 

St. Ann’s Maternity Hospital. 

Sisters of Charitv. 

Obstetrical. 

1869 

Yes. 

( l 2 * 4 * 6 7 ) 

60 

3 

1 

2 

8 


130 East Sixty-*ninth*St. 

St. Elizabeth of Hungary Hospital. 
415 West Fiftv-first St. 






24 

131 

Sisters of St. Francis_ 

Surgical. 

1870 

No. 

0) 

65 

75 


75 

24 






37 

132 

St. Francis Hospital. 

Sisters of the Poor of St. 
Francis. 

General, except contagious 
and obstetrical. 

1865 

No. 

Yes. 

450 

31 

6 

25 

37 


East One hundred and forty- 
second St., St. Ann’s and 















Brook Aves. 












32 

133 

St. Joseph’s Hospital for Consump¬ 
tives. 

Sisters of St. Francis.... 

Tubercular. 

1881 

No. 

Yes. 

600 

27 

1 

26 

32 







East One hundred and forty- 














third St. and St. Ann’s Ave. 













134 

St. Lawrence Hospital. 

Sisters of Charity... 

General, except contagious.. 

1906 

No. 

Yes. 

20 

7 


7 

6 


6 

One hundred *and sixty-third 







St. and Edgecombe Road. 












148 

135 

St. Luke’s Hospital. 

Private corporation (Episco¬ 
pal). 

General, except contagious 
and incurable. 

1850 

Yes. 

Yes. 

300 

36 

17 

19 

167 

19 

One hundred and thirteenth 


St. and Amsterdam Ave. 












136 

St. Mark’s Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except chronic and 
contagious. 

1890 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

2 28 

6 

22 

2 32 


32 

177 Second *Ave. 




137 

St. Mary’s Free Hospital for Chil¬ 
dren. " 

Sisters of St. Mary (Episco¬ 
pal). 

General. 

1870 

Yes. 

Yes. 

120 

13 

2 

11 

24 


24 





405 West Thirty-fourth St. 












138 

St. Vincent’s Hospital. 

Sisters of Charity. 

General, except contagious.. 

1849 

Yes. 

Yes. 

382 

45 

17 

28 

110 


no 

Eleventh and Twelfth Sts. 




and Seventh Ave. 













139 

Seton Hospital. 

Sisters of Charity. 

Tubercular. 

1892 

No. 

Yes. 

416 

22 

4 

18 

24 


24 

Spuyten Duyvil Parkway. 
Sloane Hospital for Women. 





140 

Columbia University College 
of Physicians and Sur- 

Obstetrical and gynecolog¬ 
ical. 

1S88 

Yes. 

Yes. 

135 

7 

4 

3 

43 


43 

447 West Fifty-ninth St. 







geons. 












141 

Sydenham Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except incurable 
and insane. 

1902 

Yes. 

Yes. 

80 

15 

6 

9 

36 

2 

34 

331 East One hundred and Six- 




teenth St. 













142 

U. S. Immigration Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

0) 

No. 

Yes. 

250 

4 

4 


44 

28 

16 

Ellis Island. 






143 

U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1794 

(12) 

Yes. 

35 

3 

3 


11 

13 11 


Fort Jay, Governors Island. 







144 

U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

( l ) 

(12) 

Yes. 

8 

1 

1 


4 

13 1 


Fort Wood, Bedloes Island. 








1 Not reported. 

2 Includes report of dispensary. 

s The New York Hospital and its dispensary are supported from general fund of the Society of the New York Hospital; finances here given are for the hospital alone. 

4 Includes report of New York Nursery and Child’s Hospital (Boarding-out Department). 

* Includes out-patients. 

6 Included in report of New York Foundling Hospital. 

7 Included in report of St. Vincent’s Hospital. 













































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


327 


SANITARIUMS: 1910—Continued. 


PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING YEAR. 

PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 

« 

RECEIPTS DURING 

YEAR. 


Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Adults 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

Total. 

Appro¬ 

pria¬ 

tions. 

Derived 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

from— 

Care of 
patients. 

Other 

sources. 

4,535 

(») 

(0 

112 

58 

54 

99 

13 

2 $182,506 

$14,039 

$14,380 

$37,042 

$117,045 

6,122 

3,841 

2,281 

203 

124 

79 

16S 

35 

(*) 


(») 

3 73,666 

3 9,329 

1,375 


1,375 

60 

6 

54 

46 

14 

9 83,751 

5,415 

26,418 

20,088 

31,830 

655 

124 

531 

27 

6 

21 

20 

7 

2 27,926 


2,532 

24,927 

467 

584 

320 

264 

259 

127 

132 

73 

186 

< 203,990 

100,109 

46,134 

14,325 

43,422 

636 

365 

271 

23 

9 

14 

( i ) 

(») 

2 38,381 

250 

388 

11,956 

25,787 

1,269 

734 

535 

28 

18 

10 

28 


2 38,054 

7,745 

7,865 

14,674 

7,770 

333 

152 

181 

61 

29 

32 

3 

58 

2 44,809 


17,707 

1,001 

26,101 

1,340 

0) 

0) 

11 

5 

6 

10 

1 

10,112 

1,540 

3,816 

4,756 


1,884 

859 

1,025 

49 

26 

23 

43 

6 

a 47,306 

3,852 

504 

42,950 


3,820 

2,001 

1,819 

148 

78 

70 

87 

61 

9 264,716 

16,245 

79,231 

45,120 

124,120 

768 

311 

457 

30 

12 

18 

26 

4 

53,852 


9,342 

34,450 

10,060 

518,427 

6,142 

12,285 

47 

18 

29 

41 

6 

87,013 


60,107 

20,329 

6,577 

392 

219 

173 

13 

12 

1 

11 

2 

2 24,035 


14,125 

9,818 

92 

296 

(■) 

(>) 

14 

5 

9 

12 

2 

12,654 

956 

3,256 

6,279 

2,163 

4,230 

2,136 

2,094 

211 

112 

99 

182 

29 

2 210,276 


47,357 

95,000 

67,919 

2,690 

1,887 

803 

312 

254 

58 

300 

12 

( i ) 

(*) 




4,215 

2,175 

2,040 

177 

92 

85 

139 

38 

220,517 


10,764 

119,973 

89,780 

333 


333 

14 


14 

8 

6 

5,956 


3,014 

856 

2,086 

396 


396 

46 


46 

46 


(«) 

(«) 

(«) 

(«) 

(«) 

690 


690 

28 

0) 

C 1 ) 

0) 

( l ) 

( l ) 

( l ) 

( l ) 

0) 

C) 

2,830 

1,500 

1,330 

309 

172 

137 

296 

13 

154,680 

42,220 

75,822 

25,638 

11,000 

2,297 

1,513 

784 

595 

338 

257 

539 

56 

138,989 

109,565 

14,843 

6,113 

8,468 


116 

35 

19 

15 

4 

19 


( 7 ) 

a) 

( 7 ) 

( r ) 

( 7 ) 

4,287 

1,997 

2,290 

295 

136 

159 

235 

60 

2 288,634 

129,985 

158,649 

1,514 

658 

856 

42 

19 

23 

35 

7 

2 55,017 

4,834 

21,407 

28,772 

4 

1 OA7 

OOfi 

i n^o 

49 

19 

30 


49 

77,374 


55,S45 


21,529 

1, yO/ 

6,074 

3,968 

X, UUJ 

2,106 

297 

179 

118 

275 

22 

10 310,384 

58,203 

68,655 

103,182 

80,344 

1,378 

933 

445 

425 

263 

162 

294 

131 

124,427 

100,564 

3,463 

16,191 

4,209 

o 006 


2 006 

109 


109 

109 


53,774 

12,706 

1,002 

16,107 

23,959 

2,109 

569 

1,540 

63 

17 

46 

o 

(■) 

75,977 

11,179 

12,068 

22,848 

29,882 

7,714 

5,342 

2,372 

138 

75 

63 


( i ) 

(») 

(») 





lift 


g 

8 


8 


(i) 

( l ) 


( l ) 


190 

Q7 

Q7 





(>) 

( i ) 


(!) 














PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

$122,272 

$109,470 

$12,802 

2 $1,028,601 

$651,100 

$377,501 

Ill 

8 262,167 

256,089 

6,078 

c) 

(>) 


112 

2 61,034 

57,216 

3,818 

2 751,905 

355,947 

395,958 

113 

2 26,587 

26,587 


2 101,000 

95,000 

6,000 

114 

4 205,974 

205,974 


4 848,872 

492,950 

355,922 

115 

2 20,667 

18,670 

1,997 

2 218,545 

170,000 

48,545 

116 

2 38,894 

38,894 


2 173,938 

107,900 

66,038 

117 

2 49,359 

49,359 


2 653,978 

121,407 

532,571 

118 

10,112 

o 

(*) 

0) 

(•) 


119 

2 54,577 

54,577 


2 764,284 

764,284 


120 

2 301,631 

220,597 

81,034 

2 1,507,731 

1,067,972 

439,759 

121 

54,290 

53,431 

859 

247,137 

247,137 


122 

63,415 

39,148 

24,267 

401,000 

254,500 

146,500 

123 

2 22,979 

22,979 


2 80,000 

80,000 


124 

13,450 

13,450 


32,266 

30,966 

1,300 

125 

2 325,424 

316,424 

9,000 

2 4,064,594 

2,713,419 

1,351,175 

126 

o) 

o) 

( i > 

0) 

(>) 


127 

206,756 

206,756 


2 3,000,000 

( i ) 

(■) 

128 

5,874 

5,874 


44,500 

41,500 

3,000 

129 

(«) 

(«) 

(•) 

w 

(«) 


130 

( i ) 

( l ) 

(*) 


(*) 


131 

69,429 

60,167 

9,262 

1,571,000 

1,571,000 


132 

146,622 

102,939 

43,683 

521,500 

521,500 


133 

o 

( r ) 

c) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 > 

( 7 ) 

134 

2 350,351 

288,801 

61,550 

2 5,633,676 

3,070,786 

2,562,890 

135 

2 54 786 

54,786 


2 125,000 

125,000 


136 

69,733 

8 69,733 


9 1,091,168 

9 599, 175 

9 491,993 

137 

,10 228,776 

8 212,964 

15,812 

io 699,535 

652,535 

47,000 

138 

124,406 

124,406 


450,000 

441,000 

9,000 

139 

54,766 

54, 766 


( i ) 


(•) 

140 

78 587 

77 368 

1,219 

145,000 

145,000 


141 

(») 

c i > 


( i ) 

( i ) 


142 




(*) 

0) 

o) 

(*) 

0) 


143 

0) 


( i ) 

0) 

( i ) 


144 


s Includes payment of mortgage. , 

9 Includes reports of Noyes Memorial Home, Peekskill, N. Y., and Wilkes Dispensary, 

10 Includes report of St. Lawrence Hospital and St. Vincent's Hospital Dispensary, 
n Finances included in general funds for immigration station. 

12 Instruction for Hospital Corps. 

1* Enlisted men, Hospital Corps. 


New York City. 













































































































































328 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table IV.— HOSPITALS AND 


£ 

B 

3 

3 

3 

O 


145 

146 

147 

148 

149 

150 

151 

152 

153 

154 

155 

156 

157 

158 

159 

160 

161 

162 

163 

164 

165 

166 

167 

168 

169 

170 

171 

172 

173 

174 

175 

176 

177 

178 

179 

180 

181 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


NEW YORK-Continued. 

New York City—C ontinued. 

Bronxand Manhattan Boroughs —Con. 
Volunteer Hospital. 

93 Gold St. 

Washington Heights Hospital. 

552 West One hundred and 
sixty-fifth St. 

Willard Parker and Reception 
Hospitals. 

East Sixteenth St. 

Woman’s Hospital. 

141 West One hundred and 
ninth St. 

Brooklyn Borough — 

Bethany Deaconess Hospital. 

237 St. Nicholas Ave. 

Bradford Street Hospital. 

109 Bradford St. 

Brooklyn Eye and Ear Hospital... 

94 Livingston St. 

Brooklyn Homeopathic Lying-in 

Asylum. 

775 Washington Ave. 

Brooklyn Hospital. 

Raymond St. and DeKalb Ave. 

Bushwick Hospital. 

2 Howard Ave. 

Coney Island Hospital. 

Ocean Parkway and Avenue Y. 
Cumberland Street Hospital. 

105 Cumberland St. 

Eastern District Hospital. 

106 South Third St. 

German Hospital of Brooklyn. 

St. Nicholas Ave. and Stock¬ 
holm St. 

Jewish Hospital. 

Classon and St. Mark’s Aves. 

Kings County Hospital. 

Clarkson Ave. and East 
Thirty-ninth St. 

Kingston Avenue Hospital. 

Kingston Ave. and Fenimore 
St. 

Long Island College Hospital. 

Henry and Amity Sts. 

Methodist Episcopal'Hospital. 

Sixth St. and Seventh Ave. 
Norwegian Lutheran Deaconess 
Home and Hospital. 

Fourth Ave. and Forty-sixth 
St. 

St. Catharine’s Hospital. 

Bushwick Ave. 

St. Christopher’s Hospital for 
Babies. 

281 Hicks St. 

St. John’s Hospital. 

Atlantic and Albany Aves. 

St. Mary’s Hospital. 

St. Mark’s and Buffalo Aves. 

St. Peter’s Hospital. 

366 Henry St. 

SamaritanHospital. 

608 Fourth Ave. 

Sea Breeze Hospital 4 . 

Twenty-ninth St. and Surf 
Ave." 

Swedish Hospital. 

126 Rogers Ave. 

U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

Fort Hamilton. 

U. S. Navy Hospital. 

Flushing Ave. 

Williamsburgh Hospital. 

Bedford Ave. and South Third 
St. 

Queens Borough — 

Far Rockaway (L. I .)— 

St. Joseph’s Hospital. 

Central Ave. 

Flushing (L. I.)— 

Flushing Hospital. 

Forest and Parsons Aves. 

Jamaica ( L. I .)— 

Jamaica Hospital. 

New York Ave. 

St. Mary’s Hospital. 

Shelton Ave. and Ray St. 

Long Island City ( L. I .)— 

St. John’s Hospital. 

Twelfth St. and Jackson Ave. 
Rockaway Beach (L. I .)— 

Rockaway Beach Hospital and 
Dispensary. 7 
Bayside Place. 

1 Includes report of dispensary. 


Supervised or conducted by— 


Volunteers of America. 
Private corporation 


City of New York... 
Private corporation. 


German Deaconess Board, 
M. E. Church. 

City of New York. 


Private corporation. 
Private corporation. 


Private corporation. 
Private corporation. 
City of New York... 
City of New York... 
Private corporation. 
Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 
City of New York... 


City of New York. 


Private corporation. 

Methodist Episcopal Church. 
Private corporation. 


Sisters of St. Dominic. 
Private corporation... 


Protestant Episcopal Church 
Sisters of Charity. 


Sisters of the Poor of St. 
Francis. 

Private corporation. 


New York Association for 
Improving the Condition 
of the Poor. 

Private corporation.. 


II. S. Government... 
U. S. Government... 
Private corporation. 

Sisters of St. Joseph. 
Private corporation. 


Private corporation... 
Sisters of St. Dominic. 


Sisters of St. Joseph. 
Private corporation. 


Class of cases treated. 

Year founded. 

Training school for 

nurses. 

Colored patients re¬ 

ceived. 

Number of beds. 

MEDICAL STAFF 
AT CLOSE OF 
YEAR. 

NURSES AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 

Total. 

Resident. 

Visiting. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Emergency. 

1906 

No. 

Yes. 

20 

36 

4 

32 

5 


5 

General.. . 

1905 

Yes. 

Yes. 

35 

16 

3 

13 

12 


12 

Contagious. 

1879 

No. 

Yes. 

700 

21 

17 

4 

45 


45 

Gynecological and obstet- 

1855 

No. 

Yes. 

100 

38 

6 

32 

29 


29 

rical. 











General. 

1894 

No. 

Yes. 

34 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

17 

10 


10 

Emergency .. 

1902 

No. 

Yes. 

8 

78 

2 

76 

2 


2 

Eye, ear, nose, and throat.... 

1868 

Yes. 

Yes. 

80 

65 

5 

60 

16 


16 

General.... 

1870 

Yes. 

No. 

50 

26 

1 

25 

18 


18 

General. 

1845 

Yes. 

Yes. 

169 

48 

8 

40 

45 

1 

44 

General, except chronic and 

1891 

Yes. 

Yes. 

32 

( 2 ) 

2 

( 2 ) 

ii 


11 

contagious. 











General. 

1910 

No. 

Yes. 

100 

i 28 

4 

24 

i 15 

1 

14 

General, except insane. 

1902 

Yes. 

Yes. 

200 

41 

6 

35 

30 

1 

29 

General. 

1851 

Yes. 

Yes. 

37 

4 

4 


11 


11 

General, except chronic and 

1894 

Yes. 

Yes. 

146 

41 

7 

34 

40 

6 

34 

contagious. 











General, except contagious.. 

1901 

Yes. 

Yes. 

265 

76 

9 

67 

78 

8 

70 

General. 

1845 

Yes. 

Yes. 

769 

i 90 

14 

76 

181 

1 

80 

Contagious. 

1889 

No. 

Yes. 

600 

9 

7 

2 

60 


60 

General, except contagious 

1857 

Yes. 

Yes. 

275 

63 

11 

52 

71 

8 

63 

and mental. 











General, except contagious.. 

1881 

Yes. 

Yes. 

225 

66 

8 

58 

80 


80 

General. 

-1882 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

16 

4 

12 

33 

1 

32 

General, except contagious... 

1870 

Yes. 

Yes. 

220 

37 

7 

30 

45 

7 

38 

General,except contagious... 

1896 

Yes. 

Yes. 

40 

11 


11 

32 


32 

General, except contagious .. 

1871 

Yes. 

Yes. 

78 

20 

4 

16 

29 


29 

General. 

1877 

Yes. 

Yes. 

230 

68 

8 

60 

60 


60 

General.. 

1864 

No. 

Yes. 

430 

23 

1 

22 

93 

32 

61 

General, except contagious.. 

1904 

Yes. 

Yes. 

35 

37 

2 

35 

i 12 


12 

Tubercular bones and glands 

1904 

No. 

Yes. 

43 

3 


3 

6 


6 

General, except chronic and 

1896 

Yes. 

Yes. 

40 

33 

3 

30 

17 


17 

contagious. 











General, except insane and 

1898 

( 5 ) 

Yes. 

18 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


17 

6 17 


tubercular. 











General. 

(2) 

No. 

Yes. 

258 

6 

6 


43 

32 

11 

General. 

1889 

Yes. 

Yes. 

60 

16 

3 

13 

1 

16 

General, except contagious 

1905 

No. 

Yes. 

54 

27 

2 

25 

14 


14 

and insane. 











General, except chronic and 

1848 

Yes. 

Yes. 

60 

i 14 

2 

12 

1 20 


20 

contagious. 











General. 

1S91 

Yes. 

Yes. 


9 

3 

6 

13 


13 

General. 

1902 

Yes. 

Yes. 

70 

17 

3 

14 

21 

3 

18 

General. 

1891 

Yes. 

Yes. 

225 

27 

6 

21 

32 


32 

General. 

1908 



40 





t reported. 

3 Equ 

ipment 



4 

Child 

ren. 






































































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


329 


SANITARIUMS: 1910—Continued. 


PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING YEAR. 

PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE 

OF YEAR. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Adults 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

272 

236 

36 

17 

16 

1 

16 

1 

602 

345 

257 

25 

18 

7 

20 

5 

5,129 

3,059 

2,070 

209 

102 

107 

42 

167 

1,401 


1,401 

55 


55 

55 


561 

209 

352 

26 

9 

17 

23 

3 

109 

87 

22 

1 


1 


1 

2,145 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

28 

16 

12 

28 


825 

227 

598 

34 

11 

23 

22 

12 

2,570 

1,210 

1,360 

117 

56 

61 

87 

30 

626 

335 

291 

13 

6 

7 

12 

1 

841 

468 

373 

52 

36 

16 

45 

7 

2,806 

1,482 

1,324 

142 

92 

50 

131 

11 

769 

509 

260 

37 

20 

17 

34 

3 

2,225 

1,131 

1,094 

77 

40 

37 

63 

14 

3,692 

1,428 

2,264 

192 

127 

65 

145 

47 

13,105 

8,734 

4,371 

705 

441 

264 

612 

93 

4,094 

2,552 

1,542 

203 

101 

102 

21 

182 

3,974 

2,345 

1,629 

177 

97 

80 

164 

13 

3,248 

1,545 

1,703 

124 

73 

51 

103 

21 

1,399 

773 

626 

81 

47 

34 

69 

12 

2,264 

1,216 

1,048 

127 

73 

54 

113 

14 

224 

117 

107 

39 

21 

18 


39 

1,215 

550 

665 

44 

22 

22 

37 


3,631 

2,128 

1,503 

177 

89 

88 

144 

33 

2,741 

1,672 

1,069 

262 

183 

79 

262 


643 

285 

358 

17 

5 

12 

15 

2 

63 

41 

22 

43 

27 

16 


43 

766 

409 

357 

36 

22 

14 

33 

3 

278 

278 


16 

16 


16 


gQ] 

891 


75 

75 


75 


956 

507 

449 

19 

11 

8 

15 

4 

678 

418 

260 

29 

20 

9 

27 

2 

1,062 

503 

559 

48 

30 

18 

36 

12 

865 

586 

279 

28 

22 

6 

22 

6 

1,581 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

66 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

2,927 

2,001 

920 

132 

84 

48 

120 

12 










RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 


Total. 


$16,513 
I 18,711 

230,433 

i 97,297 

16,052 
i 6,215 
41,852 
30,420 

70,943 
19,057 
i 46,194 
i 80,000 
16,484 
i 99,427 

i 158,277 
i 302,411 

213,094 

i 88,992 
i 151,599 
53,346 

i 134,666 
12,274 

39,020 
85,462 
123,176 
i 14,598 
13,168 

22,555 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

130,580 

28,535 

1 40,880 

22,469 

43,903 

68,543 


Derived from— 


Appro¬ 

pria¬ 

tions. 


$4,284 
4,362 

230,433 


6,215 
7,360 


20,518 
4,666 
46,194 
80,000 
9,764 
9,840 

33,653 

302,411 

212,948 

25,329 

12,526 

14,284 

34,721 

4,240 

7,572 

26,921 

52,409 

1,335 


5,5S5 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


11,233 

12,571 

8,491 

12,414 

36,810 


Dona¬ 

tions. 


Care of 
patients. 


$10,976 
6,181 


11,096 

2,407 


2,998 

377 

13,834 

797 


3% 

18,960 

8,187 


3,015 

20,748 

8,331 

34,511 

5,989 

1,082 

11,018 

26,051 

363 

4,549 

489 


8,944 

1,692 

19,468 

4,367 

14,357 

18,493 


$675 

4,717 


62,029 


13,294 


13,47 

29,979 

32,365 

9,645 


3,797 

43.339 

53.340 


146 

39,371 

57,213 

25,344 

24,285 

471 

20,251 

45,323 

8,32' 

9,629 

1,509 

10,795 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

15,341 

7,564 

6,867 

7,755 
13,114 

12,766 


Other 

sources. 


$578 

3.451 


24,172 


351 


18,017 

64 

4,226 

3,949 


2,527 

27,288 

63,097 


21,277 

61,112 

5,387 

41,149 

1,574 

10,115 

2,200 

36,389 

3,271 

7,110 

5,686 


6,295 

8,046 

1,974 

1,856 

4,018 

474 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 


Total. 


For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 


$17,571 
i 18,743 

209,654 

1 119,934 

13,268 

16,215 

35,869 

30,899 

86,950 
18,477 
i 46,194 
i 80,000 
21,834 
i 108,894 

i 255,89: 
i 302,411 

201,992 

i 90,837 
i 220,845 
48,788 

i 146,551 
12,526 

35,997 

81,419 

( 2 ) 
t 14,814 
20,770 

22,455 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

i 29,723 

23,354 

1 40,546 

20,755 

52,599 

68,887 


$17,571 

17,941 

209,654 

115,533 

12,592 
6,153 
35,869 
29,612 

( 2 ) 
18,477 
40,000 
80,000 
21,578 
82,576 

166,480 
272,170 

201,992 

90,837 
123,821 
48,788 

95,356 

12,526 

33.130 
77,434 

110,820 
14,814 
20,770 

21,673 

( 2 ) 

66.131 
26,535 

23,354 

30,716 

20,755 

( 2 ) 

61,885 


For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 


$802 


4,401 

676 

62 


1,287 

( 2 ) 


6,194 


256 

26,318 

89,417 

30,241 


97,024 


51,195 


2,867 
3,985 
( 2 ) 


782 

(») 

( 2 ) 

3,188 


9,830 


VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 


Total. 


I $23,000 
1,197,000 


92,000 
I 15,000 
205,112 
65,000 

( 2 ) 
69,000 
i 600,000 
1 125,000 
36,000 
i 402,945 

i 415,764 
i 3,125,000 

37,249 

i 491,413 
i 1,820,908 
322,241 

' 518,399 
59,000 

321,622 
450,000 
502,405 
3 2,110 


Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 


( 2 ) 

7,002 


60,000 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

i 92,000 

100,000 

i 92,857 

53,650 

( 2 ) 

533,576 


$22,000 

1,197,000 


81,500 
15,000 
104,912 
65,000 

( 2 ) 
69,000 
600,000 
125,000 
36,000 
345,018 

415,764 

3,125,000 

37,249 

394,467 

1,000,000 

225,000 

509,000 

48,000 

154,200 
450,000 
502,405 
8 2,110 


In¬ 

vested 

funds. 


$1,000 


470,000 

10,500 

100,200 


( 2 ) 


57,927 


96,946 
820,90S 
97,241 

9,399 

11,000 

167,422 


60,000 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

92,000 

100,000 

75,857 

45,650 

( 2 ) 

533,576 


17,000 

8,000 

( 2 ) 


145 

146 

147 

148 

149 

150 

151 

152 

153 

154 

155 

156 

157 

158 

159 

160 

161 

162 

163 

164 

165 

166 

167 

168 

169 

170 

171 

172 

173 

174 

175 

176 

177 

178 

179 

180 
181 


6 Instruction for Hospital Corps. 


6 Enlisted men, Hospital Corps. 


7 Not opened until 1911. 













































































































































330 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table IV.— HOSPITALS AND 



182 

183 

184 

185 

186 

187 

188 

189 

190 

191 

192 

193 

194 

195 

196 

197 

198 

199 

200 
201 

202 

203 

204 


205 


206 

207 

208 

209 

210 
211 

212 

213 

214 

215 

216 
217 I 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


NEW YORK—Continued. 

New York City—C ontinued. 
Richmond Borough — 

Fort Totten (S. I .)— 

U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

Rosebank ( S . /.)— 

U.S. Army Post Hospital. 

Fort Wadsworth. 

Stapleton (S. I .)— 

U. S. Marine Hospital.,. 

Bay St. 

Tompkinsville, {S. /.)— 

Samuel Russell Smith Infirmary... 
Castleton Ave. 

West New Brighton, (S. I .)— 

St. Vincent’s Hospital. 

Castleton Ave. 

Newbuegh: 

St. Luke’s Hospital. 

Dubois St. 

Niagara Falls: 

Mount St. Mary’s Hospital. 

604 Ferry Ave. 

Niagara Falls Memorial Hospital.. 
Eleventh and Pine Sts. 

Nyack: 

Nyack Hospital. 

Midland Ave. 

Ogdensburg: 

Ogdensburg City Hospital. 

45 King St. 

St. John of God Hospital. 

Olean: 

Olean General Hospital. 

519 North First St. 

Oneida: 

Oneida Public Hospital. 

87 William St. 

Oneonta: 

Fox Memorial Hospital. 

3 Norton Ave. 

Ossining: 

Ossining Hospital. 

210 Spring St. 

Oswego: 

Oswego Hospital. 

Bridge and Sixth Sts. 

U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

Fort Ontario. 

Peekskill: 

Peekskill Hospital. 

151 South St. 

Plattsburg: 

Champlain Valley Hospital. 

U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

Plattsburg Barracks. 

Port Chester: 

United Hospital. 

110 Smith St. 

Poughkeepsie: 

Vassar Brothers’ Hospital. 

Ray Brook: 

New York State Hospital for In¬ 
cipient Tuberculosis. 
Rhinebeck: 

Thompson Hospital. 

Livingston St. 

Rochester: 

Hahnemann Hospital. 

9 Rockingham St. 

Monroe County Hospital. 

1460 South Ave. 

Rochester General Hospital. 

223 West Ave. 

Rochester Homeopathic Hospital. 

224 Alexander St. 

Rochester Municipal Hospital. 

St. Mary’s Hospital. 

447 West Ave. 

Rome: 

Rome Hospital. 

Garden St. 

Rome Infirmary. 

Sacketts Harbor: 

U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

Madison Barracks. 
Salamanca: 

Salamanca Hospital. 

68 River St. 

Saranac Lake: 

Reception Hospital. 

Franklin Ave. 

Rumenapp Sanitarium. 

Moody Pond Road. 


Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of cases treated. 

Year founded. 

Training school for 

nurses. 

Colored patients re¬ 

ceived. 

Number of beds. 

MEDICAL STAFF 
AT CLOSE OF 
YEAR. 

NURSES AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 

*3 

•4-S 

o 

H 

■4-S 

S 

\n 

© 

PH 

th 

1 

2 

> 

C3 

o 

H 

© 

C3 

a 

© 

*3 

a 

© 

pH 

U. S. Government. 

General__ 

1906 

0) 

Yes. 

48 

2 

2 


20 

2 20 


U. S. Government.. 

General.. 

(3) 

(') 

Yes. 

34 

2 

2 


12 

2 12 


TT_ Gnvp.rmnfint- _ _ 

General. 

1883 

No. 

Yes. 

150 

4 

4 


8 

8 


Private corporation. 

General. 

1863 

Yes. 

Yes. 

161 

26 

5 

21 

47 


47 

Sisters of Charity. 

General.. 

1903 

Yes. 

Yes. 

133 

11 

3 

8 

23 


23 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1876 

Yes. 

Yes. 

75 

13 

1 

12 

18 


18 

Sisters of St. Francis. 

General, except chronic. 

1907 

Yes. 

Yes. 

33 

20 


20 

17 

1 

16 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1895 

Yes. 

Yes. 

90 

( 3 ) 


( 3 ) 

30 


30 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious 

1895 

No. 

Yes. 

25 

6 


6 

8 


8 


and obstetrical. 











Sisters of Charity (Grey 

General, except contagious.. 

1902 

Yes. 

Yes. 

75 

(») 


( 3 ) 

26 


26 

Nuns). 












Sisters of Charity (Grev 

Contagious. 

1885 

No. 

( 3 ) 

31 

( 3 ) 


( 8 ) 

3 


3 

Nuns). 









Private corporation. 

General, except contagious 

1902 

Yes. 

Yes. 

15 

19 


19 

7 


7 


and obstetrical. 











City of Oneida. 

General, except contagious.. 

1899 

No. 

Yes. 

5 

( 3 ) 

2 

( 3 ) 

2 

1 

1 

Private corporation. 

General, except chronic and 

1900 

Yes. 

Yes. 

25 

4 


4 

8 


8 


contagious. 











Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1888 

Yes. 

Yes. 

31 

6 


6 

10 


10 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious 

1881 

Yes. 

Yes. 

60 

16 


16 

18 


18 


and insane. 











U. S. Government. 

General. 

1905 

(i) 

Yes. 

17 

1 

1 


8 

2 S 


Private corporation. 

General, except tubercular 

1890 

Yes. 

Yes. 

36 

10 


10 

10 


10 


and venereal. 











Private corporation. 

General. 

1910 

Yes. 

Yes. 

56 

48 

9 

39 

16 


16 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

(3) 

0) 

Yes. 

40 

1 

1 


( 2 ) 

( s ) 


Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1886 

No. 

Yes. 

18 

7 


7 

5 

5 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1882 

Yes. 

Yes. 

70 

5 

2 

3 

s 27 

1 

26 

State of New Y ork. 

Tubercular. 

1900 

No. 

Yes. 

250 

4 

4 


9 


9 

Trustees of Thomas Thomp- 

General, except contagious.. 

1903 

No. 

Yes. 

15 

8 


8 

5 


5 

son Fund. 












Private corporation. 

General. 

1889 

Yes. 

Yes. 

115 

17 

3 

14 

37 


37 

County of Monroe. 

General. 

1906 

No. 

Yes. 

262 

8 

3 

5 

21 

7 

14 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious 

1847 

Yes. 

Yes. 

140 

17 

4 

13 

61 


61 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1889 

Yes. 


140 

6 25 

4 

21 

6 54 


54 

City of Rochester. 

Tubercular and contagious 

1903 

No 

Yes. 


4 


4 

3 

1 

2 

Sisters of Charity. 

General. 

1857 


Yes. 

210 

28 

4 

24 

64 

7 

57 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1884 

Yes. 

Yes. 

30 

12 


12 

12 


12 

Private individuals. 

Surgical. 

1907 

Yes. 

Yes. 

35 

5 

5 


11 

1 

10 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1900 

(i) 

Yes. 

36 

2 

2 


12 

2 12 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1897 

No. 

Yes. 

3 

12 


12 

1 


1 

Private corporation. 

Advanced pulmonary tuber- 

1901 

No. 

Yes. 

18 

5 


5 

3 


3 


cular. 











Private organization. 

Tubercular. 

1903 

No. 

No. 

15 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

5 

i 


i 


1 Instruction for Hospital Corps. 3 Not reported. 3 Includes report of dispensary. 

2 Enlisted men, Hospital Corps. * Exclusive of out-patients. * Exclusive of 118 children, sex not specified. 
















































































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


331 


SANITARIUMS: 1910—Continued. 


PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING YEAR. 

PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE 

OF YEAR. 


RECEIPTS DURING 

YEAR. 


Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Adults 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

Total.* 

Appro¬ 

pria¬ 

tions. 

Derived 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

from— 

Care of 
patients. 

Other 

sources. 

473 

473 


15 

15 


15 


( 3 ) 

m 


m 


183 

183 


10 

10 


10 


( 3 ) 

v. ) 

m 


V , / 

( s ) 


4 1,535 

1,535 


130 

130 


130 


$53,988 

v / 

$53,988 



3,415 

2,201 

1,214 

105 

53 

52 

78 

27 

5 76,780 

19,405 

$12,282 

$28,295 

$16,798 

1,754 

1,170 

584 

123 

97 

26 

113 

10 

& 70 ,744 

37,977 

1,667 

10,434 

20,666 

• 878 

513 

365 

49 

( 3 ) 

( 3 > 

44 

5 

34,941 

2,000 

6,001 

19,696 

7,244 

515 

276 

239 

16 

7 

9 

16 


13,613 

3,854 

110 

7,559 

2,090 

963 

( 3 ) 

( 3 > 

45 

30 

15 

45 


49,516 

4,532 

1,514 

22,009 

11,461 

386 

177 

209 

11 

7 

4 

1 J 


14,302 

2,000 

3,717 

6,632 

1,953 

1,394 

800 

594 

46 

31 

15 

45 

1 

25,738 


1,012 

23,424 

• 1,302 

39 

18 

21 

1 


1 

1 


o 

( 7 ) 

c 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

285 

159 

126 

9 

4 

5 

9 


8,853 

1,732 

602 

5,526 

993 

29 

22 

7 

2 

2 


2 


2,118 

1,500 

45 

573 


407 

240 

167 

12 

7 

5 

11 

1 

8,878 

3,000 

599 

5,113 

166 

413 

181 

232 

26 

11 

15 

24 

2 

6 15,204 

1,500 

2,781 

5,069 

5,854 

573 

267 

306 

33 

18 

15 

27 

6 

24,369 

2,984 

9,541 

9,117 

2,727 

104 

104 







( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


( 3 ) 


466 

292 

174 

24 

12 

12 

24 


10,966 

1,000 

2,463 

4,580 

2,923 

334 

134 

200 

62 

19 

43 

37 

25 

25,753 


17,553 

8,185 

15 

371 

370 

1 

4 

4 


4 


( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


( 3 ) 


263 

( 3 ) 

( 3 > 

10 

C 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

(») 

( 3 ) 

9,225 

1,500 

1,733 

3,097 

2,895 

1,119 

607 

512 

49 

27 

22 

47 

2 

6 59,128 



7,630 

51,498 

300 

158 

142 

240 

120 

120 

236 

4 

80,000 

8 79,942 



9 58 

100 

43 

57 

6 

3 

3 

6 


12,966 

11,577 

1,389 


1,456 

591 

865 

67 

24 

43 

58 

9 

35,471 


3,600 

27,846 

4,025 

1,865 

1,363 

502 

263 

178 

85 

255 

8 

43,296 

43,296 




2,027 

791 

1,236 

111 

33 

78 

87 

24 

98,249 

4,725 

22,485 

57,240 

13,799 

2,475 

972 

1,503 

100 

51 

49 

89 

11 

5 79,895 

4,225 

11,512 

57,982 

6,176 

165 

107 

58 

23 

15 

8 

23 


19,046 

18,190 


856 


2,216 

924 

1,292 

95 

48 

47 

79 

16 

66,108 

7,347 

1,551 

48,209 

9,001 

406 

227 

179 

21 

11 

10 

20 

1 

9,371 

1,785 


7,586 


315 

m 

(3\ 

25 

10 

15 

25 


(3) 



( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


V / 

370 

ft 

10 

10 

10 


( 3 ) 

(3) 


( 3 ) 

21 

17 

4 




507 

311 

56 

115 

25 

1 99 

R 4 

9ft 

18 

15 

3 

18 


11,331 


4,200 

7,131 


23 

14 

9 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( a ) 

( 3 > 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

2 







s 



For 


Land, 


a 


For 

perma- 


build- 

In- 

a 

© 

Total. 

running 

ex- 

nent 

im- 

Total. 

ings, 

and 

vested 

funds. 

a 

■4-3 


penses. 

prove- 


equip- 





ments. 


ment. 


a 







t -4 

( 3 ) 

< 3 ) 

( 3 > 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


182 

( 3 ) 

( j ) 

( 3 > 

( 3 ) 

(») 


183 

$53,988 

( 3 > 

e ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 > 


184 

5 80,668 

$80,610 

$58 

5$398,593 

$294,293 

$104,300 

185 

5 70,158 

52,550 

17,608 

& 182,255 

182,255 


186 

34,360 

29,097 

5,263 

183,432 

125,000 

58,432 

187 

13,603 

12,990 

613 

39,000 

39,000 


188 

52,323 

48,590 

3,733 

193,646 

182,546 

11,100 

189 

14,131 

14,131 


73,358 

40,950 

32,408 

190 

25,804 

22,585 

3,219 

62,890 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

191 

( 7 ) 

o 

( 7 ) 

o 

( 7 > 


192 

9,567 

9,022 

545 

22,137 

12,137 

10,000 

193 

If 943 

1,808 

135 

5,000 

5,000 


194 

8,798 

8,798 


27,178 

25,000 

2,178 

195 

511,711 

10,193 

1,518 

6 131,000 

112,500 

18,500 

196 

24,450 

21,665 

2,785 

108,191 

85,000 

23,191 

197 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 > 

( 3 ) 


198 

13,921 

11,952 

1,969 

44,100 

28,100 

16,000 

199 

25,743 

8,190 

17,553 

125,500 

125,500 


200 

( 3 ) 

( 3 > 

( a ) 

( s ) 

( 3 ) 


201 

9,622 

9,622 


61,500 

61,500 


202 

5 60,202 

60,202 


5 1,500,479 

360,584 

1,139,895 

203 

80,000 

80,000 


485,947 

485,947 


204 

11,578 

10,361 

1,217 

20,207 

20,207 


205 

71,003 

32,796 

38,207 

160,000 

157,000 

3,000 

206 

43,296 

43,096 

200 

125,000 

125,000 


207 

86,459 

86,459 


567,455 

371,165 

196,290 

208 

5 119,497 

70,536 

48,961 

5 432,771 

296,584 

136,187 

209 

( 3 ) 

13,201 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( a ) 

( 3 ) 

210 

65,700 

56,443 

9,257 

342,000 

342,000 


211 

10,624 

10,624 


20,000 

20,000 


212 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


213 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


214 

316 

316 


1,000 

375 

625 

215 

11,598 

11,389 

209 

49,391 

42,000 

7,391 

216 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

c 3 ) 

4,000 

( 3 > 

217 


9 Covered into state treasury. 


7 Included in report of City Orphanage and Home for the Aged. 


8 Exclusive of amount covered into state treasury 






































































































































































332 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table IV.— HOSPITALS AND 


£ 

£ 

3 

3 



-*-s 


CO 


a 


218 

219 

220 

221 

222 

223 

224 

225 

226 

227 

228 

229 

230 

231 

232 

233 

234 

235 

236 

237 

238 

239 

240 

241 

242 

243 

244 

245 

246 

247 

248 

249 

250 

251 

252 

253 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


NEW YORK—Continued. 


Supervised or conducted by— 


Class of cases treated. 


Saratoga Springs: 

Saratoga Hospital. 

West Harrison and Division 

Sts. 

Schenectady: 

Ellis Hospital. 

Nott St. and Rosa Road. 

Southampton, L. I.: 

Southampton Hospital. 

Meeting House Lane and 
Lewis St. 

Suffern: 

Good Samaritan Hospital. 

Orange Ave. 

Syracuse: 

City Hospital. 

416 Teal Ave. 

Hospital of the Good Shepherd.... 
110 Marshall St. 

St. Joseph’s Hospital. 

St. Mary’s Maternity Hospital_ 

126 Spring St. 

Syracuse Homeopathic Hospital.. 
116 East Castle St. 

Women’s and Children’s Hospital 3 
1214 West Genesee St. 

Tarrytown: 

Tarrvtown Hospital. 

W ood Court. 

Ticonderoga: 

Moses Hospital. 

Troy: 

Leonard Hospital. 

Fourteenth St. and Sixth Ave. 

Marshall Sanitarium. 

Linden Ave. 

St. Joseph’s Maternity Hospital... 
Thompson St. 

Samaritan Hospital. 

E ighth St. 

Troy Hospital. 

Eighth St. 

Trudeau: 

Adirondack Cottage Sanitarium.. 


Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Sisters of Charity. 

City of Syracuse. 

Private corporation. 

Sisters of Third Order of St. 
Francis. 

Sisters of Charity. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Sisters of St. Joseph. 

Private corporation. 

Sisters of Charity. 

Private corporation. 


General. 

General, except chronic and 
contagious. 

General, except contagious.. 


General, except contagious.. 


Contagious. 

General, except chronic .con¬ 
tagious, and insane. 
General, except contagious 
and insane. 

Obstetrical. 

General. 

General, except contagious.. 


General, except contagious.. 


General. 

General. 

Mental, nervous, narcotic, 
and alcoholic. 

Maternity. 

General. 

General. 


Incipient pulmonary tuber¬ 
cular. 


Tuxedo: 

Tuxedo Hospital. 

Utica: 

Faxton Hospital. 

Sunset Ave. 

St. Elizabeth’s Hospital and 
Home (Hospital Department). 
722 Columbia St. 

St. Luke’s Home and Hospital 
(Hospital Department). 

512 Whitesboro St. 

Utica General Hospital. 

South and Mohawk Sts. 

Utica Homeopathic Hospital. 

Genesee St. 

Watertown: 

House of the Good Samaritan. 

832 Washington St. 

St. Joachim’s Hospital. 

218 Stone St. 

West Point: 

Cadet Hospital. 

U. S. Military Academy. 
Westfield: 

Chautauqua Sanitarium and Hos¬ 
pital. 

62 South Portage St. 

White Plains: 

St. Agnes’ Hospital for Crippled 
and Atypical Children. 

North St. 

White Plains Hospital. 

53 Post Road. 

Yonkers: 

City Hospital. 

St. John’s Riverside Hospital. 

Ashburton Ave. and N. B’way. 

St. Joseph’s Hospital. 

127 South Broadway. 

Sprain Ridge Hospital. 

Yonkers Homeopathic Hospital 
and Maternity. 9 
127 Ashburton Ave. 
Youngstown: 

U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

Fort Niagara. 


Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Sisters of Third Order of St. 
Francis. 

Grace Church (Episcopal)... 

City of Utica. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Sisters of Mercy. 

U. S. Government. 

Private individual. 

Sisters of St. Francis. 

Private corporation. 

City of Yonkers. 

Private corporation. 

Sisters of Charity. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

U. S. Government. 


General, except contagious.. 

General. 

General, except contagious.. 

General, except contagious.. 

General. 

General. 

General, except contagious.. 
General. 

General. 

General. 

Crippled and atypical. 

General, except contagious.. 

Contagious. 

General. 

General. 

Incipient tubercular. 

General. 

General. 


Year founded. 

Training school for 

nurses. 

Colored patients re¬ 

ceived. 

Number of beds. 

MEDICAL STAFF 
AT CLOSE OF 
YEAR. 

NURSES AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 

Total. 

Resident. 

Visiting. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

1891 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

14 

1 

13 

1 13 


13 

1885 

Yes. 

Yes. 

105 

21 

3 

18 

36 


36 

1909 

No. 

Yes. 

12 

10 


10 

4 


4 

1902 

Yes. 

Yes. 

30 

7 


7 

8 


8 

1870 

No. 

Yes. 

200 

1 

1 


8 


8 

1873 

Yes. 

Yes. 

186 

62 

5 

57 

72 


72 

1869 

Yes. 

Yes. 

130 

( 2 ) 

4 

( 2 ) 

33 


33 

1900 

Yes. 

No. 

13 

6 


6 

5 


5 

1895 

Yes. 

Yes. 

38 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

9 

17 


17 

1887 

Yes. 

Yes. 

150 

46 

4 

42 

35 


35 

1892 

No. 

Yes. 

10 

12 


12 

4 

1 

3 

1909 

No. 

Yes. 

10 

5 


5 

1 


1 

1893 

No. 

Yes. 

25 

16 

9 

7 

6 


6 

1851 

No. 

No. 

90 

7 

2 

5 

21 

10 

11 

1908 

Yes. 

Yes. 

25 

25 


25 

7 


7 

1896 

Yes. 

Yes. 

125 

15 

3 

12 

38 


38 

1850 

Yes. 

Yes. 

125 

( 2 ) 

4 

( 2 ) 

43 


43 

1884 

No. 

No. 

110 

5 

4 

1 

5 


5 

1908 

No. 

Yes. 

16 

2 

1 

1 

4 


4 

1873 

Yes. 

Yes. 

55 

52 

2 

50 

27 


27 

1866 

Yes. 

Yes. 

40 

16 

1 

15 

18 

1 

17 

1869 

Yes. 

Yes. 

80 

24 

3 

21 

31 

1 

30 

1859 

Yes. 

Yes. 

75 

24 

1 

23 

17 


17 

1895 

Yes. 

Yes. 

25 

10 


10 

12 


12 

1881 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

13 

1 

12 

18 


18 

1894 

Yes. 

Yes. 

60 

32 


32 

19 


19 

1802 

( 7 ) 

No. 

60 

3 


3 

10 

8 10 


1906 

No. 

No. 

15 

8 


8 

3 


3 

1908 

No. 

No. 

190 

17 

1 

16 

6 


6 

1893 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

26 

1 

25 

17 


17 

1888 

No. 

Yes. 

52 

1 


1 

4 


4 

1870 

Yes. 

Yes. 

94 

20 

3 

17 

36 


36 

1888 

Yes. 

Yes. 

75 

29 

2 

27 

22 


22 

1908 

No. 

No. 

24 

1 


1 

4 


4 

1896 

Yes. 

( 2 ) 

65 

7 


7 

15 


15 

1866 

( 7 ) 

Yes. 

12 

1 

1 


10 

8 10 



1 Includes report of dispensary. * Includes investments. 

2 Not reported. ' 3 Includes report of St. Elizabeth’s Home. 

3 Men admitted to Eye, Ear, and Throat Infirmary. 









































































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


333 


SANITARIUMS: 1910—Continued. 


PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING YEAR. 

PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 

RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 

PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. | 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Adults 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

Total. 

Derived from— 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

Appro¬ 

pria¬ 

tions. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
patients. 

Other 

sources. 

597 

284 

313 

30 

11 

19 

26 

4 

i $18,112 

$4,952 

$3,242 

$8,026 

$1,892 

1 $15,291 

$15,291 


1 $35,000 

$20,000 

$15,000 

218 

1,478 

804 

674 

54 

32 

22 

42 

12 

1 46,884 

6,632 

7,055 

29,306 

3,891 

144 ,603 

43,503 

$1,100 

1 274,240 

237,390 

36,850 

219 

108 

51 

57 

4 

2 

2 

4 


i 9,124 


6,889 

2,089 

146 

1 9,895 

7,689 

2,206 

1 7,326 

7,326 


220 

376 

200 

176 

10 

6 

4 

10 


8,528 

2,000 

2, 208 

3,575 

745 

8.678 

8,678 

41,000 

41,000 


221 

606 

300 

306 

36 

14 

22 

8 

28 

2,026 

2,026 


7,058 

7,058 


80,000 

80,000 


222 

2,803 

1,402 

1,401 

141 

71 

70 

119 

22 

78,673 

9,625 

10,617 

55,635 

2,796 

52,464 

52,313 

151 

481,963 

476,980 

4,983 

223 

2,063 

1,451 

612 

108 

72 

36 

101 

7 

110,753 

15,514 

3,638 

26,110 

65,491 

110,371 

59,204 

51,167 

250,000 

250,000 


224 

48 


48 

8 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

11,102 

6,641 

317 

4,144 


10,696 

9,215 

1,481 

20,000 

20,000 


225 

760 

307 

453 

28 

14 

14 

24 

4 

20,762 

468 

2,487 

15,238 

2,569 

20,226 

17,618 

2,608 

143,744 

138,000 

5,744 

226 

1,550 

471 

1,079 

72 

21 

51 

34 

38 

53,294 

6,106 

6,571 

26,994 

13,623 

57,005 

57,005 


282,396 

210,000 

72,396 

227 

175 

108 

67 

4 

4 


4 


5,951 

500 

1,879 

1,991 

1,581 

5,670 

5,670 


122,000 

93,000 

29,000 

228 

66 

32 

34 

10 

4 

6 

10 


2,584 

500 

684 

1,400 


2,796 

2,796 


20,000 

20,000 

229 

282 

107 

175 

15 

5 

10 

15 


9,181 

985 

1,178 

6,937 

81 

9,547 

9,547 


I 

22,500 

22,500 


230 

448 

345 

103 

68 

31 

37 

68 


41,275 


100 

40,560 

615 

38,597 

38,597 


55,000 

55,000 


231 

121 


121 

5 


5 

5 


3,980 

169 

645 

2,241 

925 

4,036 

3,618 

418 

100,000 

100,000 


232 

1,445 

668 

777 

84 

36 

48 

75 

9 

i 125,592 


67,232 

46,074 

12, 286 

1 ,<125,592 

4 125,592 


1, <354,559 

202,444 

152,115 

233 

1,563 

( j ) 

( 2 > 

106 

55 

51 

94 

12 

46,252 

12,015 

1,207 

28,100 

4,930 

47,102 

43,262 

3,840 

261,000 

219,000 

42,000 

234 

211 

118 

93 

110 

56 

54 

110 


99,588 


25,841 

44,017 

29,730 

83,130 

72,859 

10,271 

907,116 

317,577 

589,539 

235 

158 

1 

157 

10 

5 

5 

6 

4 

15,938 


7,545 

5,103 

3,290 

16,025 

12,916 

3,109 

55,000 

40,000 

15,000 

236 

1,231 

453 

778 

31 

12 

19 

28 

3 

36,739 


5,340 

26,655 

4,744 

37,454 

37,454 


157,723 

125,000 

32, 723 

237 

706 

334 

372 

25 

11 

14 

22 

3 

& 24,434 

712 

2,596 

16,836 

4,290 

& 13,692 

13,692 


& 169,757 

56,567 

113,190 

238 

1,052 

413 

639 

48 

12 

36 

42 

6 

(•) 


(«) 

(•) 

(•) 

( # ) 

( e ) 

( e ) 

( 6 ) 

(«) 

(«) 

239 

813 

443 

370 

48 

27 

21 

40 

8 

21,042 

21,042 




20,972 

20,972 


84,000 

84.000 


240 

263 

87 

176 

15 

5 

10 

11 

4 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

(2) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

(2) 


241 

803 

356 

447 

26 

10 

16 

24 

2 

26,711 

571 

5,850 

• 

12,978 

7,312 

24,061 

22, 757 

1,304 

170,671 

112,472 

58,199 

242 

673 

323 

350 

43 

23 

20 

35 

8 

17,686 

1,260 

2,111 

14,044 

271 

14,534 

14,186 

348 

63,050 

63,050 


243 

2 005 

2 005 


15 

15 


15 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


244 

80 

28 

52 

6 

2 

4 

6 


3,450 


3,450 


3,840 

3,840 

9,500 

9,500 


245 

231 

135 

96 

182 

104 

78 


182 

34,823 

27,519 

1,770 

3,112 

2,422 

29,173 

26,014 

3,159 

148,000 

148,000 


246 

70Q 

392 

317 

21 

13 

8 

21 


25,181 

1,500 

1,811 

11,756 

10,114 

24,939 

24,939 

136,000 

130,000 

6,000 

247 

187 

77 

V 

110 

25 

11 

14 

3 

22 

5 500 

5,500 



5,500 

5,500 


50,000 

50,000 

248 

1,210 

678 

532 

62 

32 

30 

43 

19 

52’ 374 

5,000 

10,429 

17,996 

18,949 

58,451 

58,451 


74i;772 

345,764 

396,008 

249 

711 

316 

395 

41 

19 

22 

41 


21,061 

5,000 

1,265 

8,642 

6,154 

20,388 

20,388 


287,458 

32,458 

255,000 

250 

42 

22 

20 

13 

7 

6 

13 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

251 

706 


706 

20 


20 

20 


121,546 

2,000 

105,161 

10,344 

4,041 

68,029 

20. 728 

47,301 

292,619 

182,074 

110,545 

252 

153 

153 


5 

5 


5 


( s ) 

( 2 ) 


(*) 


( 2 ) 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


253 


6 Included in report of St. Luke's Home. 

7 Instruction for Hospital Corps. 


8 Enlisted men, Hospital Corps. 

9 Women. 
















































































































































w 

- 

— 

a 

g 

c 

£ 

w 

3 

w 

— 

a 

M 

1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 

9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 

21 

22 

23 

24 

25 

26 

27 

28 

29 

30 

31 

1 

2 

3 

4 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table IT.—HOSPITALS AND 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


Supervised or conducted by— 


NORTH CAROLINA. 


Asheville: 

Asheville Mission Hospital. 

Charlotte and Woodfin Sts. 

Winyah Sanitarium. 

Winy ah Park. 

Biltmobe: 

Clarence Barker Memorial Hospital 
and Dispensary. 

Black Mountain: 

Cragmont Sanatorium. 

Pines Sanatorium. 

Royal League Sanatorium. 

Charlotte: 

Charlotte Sanatorium. 

Seventh and Church Sts. 

Good Samaritan Hospital for Col¬ 
ored People. 

405 West Hill St. 

Mercy General Hospital. 

8 East First St. 

Presbyterian Hospital. 

Trade and Mint Sts. 

St. Peter’s Hospital. 

Poplar St. 

Davidson: 

Davidson College Infirmary. 

Concord Ave. 

Durham: 

Lincoln Hospital. 

Proctor St. 

Watts Hospital. 

1010 West Main St. 

Goldsboro: 

Goldsboro Hospital. 

Herman St. 

Greensboro: 

St. Leo's Hospital. 

S ummi t. Ave. 

High Point: 

Junior Order Hospital. 

127 Boulevard. 

Montrose: 

North Carolina Sanatorium. 

Aberdeen P. O. 

Morganton: 

Grace Hospital. 

Newbern: 

Stewart Sanatorium. 

George St. 

Raleigh: 

Rex Hospital. 

117 West South St. 

St. Agnes Hospital. 

Tarboro Road. 

Rocky Mount: 

Atlantic Coast Line Hospital«. 

Southport: 

U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

Fort Caswell. 

Statesville: 

Billingsly Memorial Hospital. 

654 Park St. 

Tarboro: 

Pittman Hospital. 

313 St. Andrews St. 

Washington: 

Memorial Hospital. 

Market St. 

Wilmington: 

James Walker Memorial Hospital.. 
Rankin and Wood Sts. 

U. S. Marine Hospital. 

403 South Eighth St. 

Winston-Salem: 

Slater Hospital. 

Twin City Hospital. 

Brookstown Ave. 


Private corporation. 

Private individual. 

All Souls’ Protestant Episco¬ 
pal Church. 

Private corporation. 

Private organization. 

Fellowship Association of 
Royal League. 

Private corporation.j 

Private organization (Epis¬ 
copal). 

Sisters of Mercy. 

Presbyterian churches of 
Charlotte. 

Private corporation (Epis¬ 
copal). 

Davidson College. 

Private corporation. : 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Sisters of Charity. 

United American Mechanics. 

State of North Carolina. 

Private corporation. 

Private organization. 

Private corporation. 

Private organization (Epis¬ 
copal). 

Relief Department, Atlantic 
Coast Line Railroad Co. 

U. S. Government. 

City of Statesville. 

Private corporation. 

Private individual.j 

Private corporation.; 

U. S. Government. 

Private organization. 

Private association. 


NORTH DAKOTA. 
Bismarck: 

St. Alexius’ Hospital. 

Sixth and Main Sts. 

U. S. Army Post Hospital 
Fort Lincoln. 

Devils Lake: 

Mercy Hospital. 

Fargo: 

St. John’s Hospital. 

365 Sixth Ave., south. 


Sisters of St. Benedict 
U. S. Government... 


Sisters of Mercy_ 

Sisters of St. Joseph 


Class of cases treated. 

> 

if 

tc - 

C 

ir 1 

& 

h 

3 

r > 

- 

o 

- 

c 

_r 

L. 

2 

MEDICAL STATE 
AT CLOSE OF 
TEAR. 

NURSES AT CLOSE 
OF TEAR. 

Total. 

,1, 

5 * 

| > 


5 


General, except contagious.. 

1SS5 

Yes. 

Yes. 

60 

J 

. W 

30 


30 

Tubercular. 

1SS8 

No. 

Xo. 

75 

4 

3; lj 

5 


5 

General. 

1900 

Yes. 

Xo. 

16 

11 

.: u 1 ; 

9 


9 

Tubercular. 

1906 

No. 

Xo. 

25 

1 

i. 

2 


2 

Tubercular. 

1901 

No. 

Xo. 

15 

1 

i. 

lj 


r 

Tubercular. 

1905 

No. 

Xo. 

30 

1 

i.1 

2 



General. 

190S 

Yes. 

No. 

50 

11 

. 1 lj 

35 


35 

General, except contagious, 

1891 

Yes. 

Yes. 

14 

5 

. 5 

5 

1 

4 

incurable, and insane. 










General 

1906 



*» 

O) 

. (*) j| 

5 


S 

General.. 

1903 


m 


12 

. 12 

21 


21 

General, except incurable 

1S76 

Yes. 

No. 

40 

- 

8 

. 8j 

16 


16 

and insane. 










General.. 

19Q2 

\n 


* 

1 

1. 

1 


1 

General. 

1901 

Yes. 

Yes. 

38 

34 

4 30 

16 

1 

> 

S 

General, except contagious 

1895 

Yes. 

Xo. 

49 

26 

. 35 

20 


39 

and incurable. 










General, except contagious 

1902 

No. 

Yes. 

50 

12 

. 12 

4 


4 

and infectious. 










General. 

1906 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

36 

1 35 

30 

3 

27 

General. 

1906 


No 

1<> 

3 

. 3 




Pulmonarv tubercular... 

1908 



40 

9 

2. 

9 


3 

General. 

1906 


Yes 


3 

. 3 

5 


5 

General. 

1906 





. 0) 













General. 

1840 


No 

50 

11 

1 10 

15 


15 

General. 

1896 


(l) 

50 


1 9 

20 


30( 

General. 

1900 

No. 

Yes. 

(*) 

« 

(*) (*) 

<*) 

(*) 

(*) 

General. 

1S26 

(•) 

Yes. 

19 

J 

1.j 

11 

* 11 

. 

General. 

1899 

No 


12 

If* 

.... 10 

3 


3 

General. 

1901 

Yes 

Yes 

30 

3 

. 3 

4 


4 

General. 

1904 


Yes 

25 



6 


6 

General. 

1901 

Yes. 

Yes. 


0) 

3 0) 

IS 


is 

General. 

1859 

Xo. 

Yes. 

30 

lj 

1. 

*> 


General, except contagious.. 

1899 

Xo. 



0) 

. 0) 

1 

. 

1 

General. 

1887 

Yes. 

Xo. 


131 

. 131 

$ 


6 

General. 

1SS4 

No. 

(i) 

50 

10 

10. 

9 

1 

8 

General. 

1902 

(*) 

Yes. 

IS 


9 

6 

>6 


General. 

1895 

Yes. 

Yes. 

65 

4 

. 4 

s 

. 

8 

General. 

1900 

Yes. 

Yes. 

72 

20 

1 19 

29 














1 Not reported. 4 Employees. 

* Includes report of dispensary. * Included in report of Atlantic Coast Line Hospital, Waycross, Ga. 

» Colored only. 








































































































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


335 


SANITARIUMS: 1910—Continued. 


PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING TEAR. 

PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 


RECEIPTS DURING 

YEAR. 


PAYMENTS DURING TEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. || 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Adults 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

Total. 

Derived from— 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

Appro¬ 

pria¬ 

tions. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
patients. 

Other 

sources. 

786 

324 

462 

33 

P) 

P) 

0) 

P) 

$17,061 

$2,400 

$928 

SI 1,769 

$1,964 

$18,481 

$18,481 


$53,500 

$50,000 

$3,500 

i 

180 

94 

86 

60 

34 

26 

60 


94,478 



85,325 

9,153 

79,157 

79,157 


50,000 

50,000 


2 

151 

67 

84 

5 

2 

3 

5 


11,163 


2,545 

6,127 

2,491 

11,163 

11,163 


45,000 

25,000 

20,000 

3 

28 

12 

16 

0) 

0) 

P) 

14 

0) 

P) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

P) 

P) 

p> 

P) 

P) 

P) 

4 

31 

15 

16 

10 

4 

6 

10 


6,500 



6,500 


5,725 

5,425 

$300 

7,000 

7,000 


5 

39 

32 

7 

23 

18 

5 

23 


IE 201 


2,436 

8” 765 


lOj 909 

9,081 

1,828 

25^453 

25,453 


6 

864 

468 

396 

25 

14 

11 

25 


23,492 


23,492 


20,573 

20,573 

115,000 

115,000 


7 

255 

130 

125 

4 

2 

2 

4 


3,692 


1,463 

1,919 

310 

3,255 

3,255 


13,500 

12,000 

1,500 

8 

218 

98 

120 

22 

7 

15 

18 

4 

5,048 


541 

3,245 

1,262 

4,880 

4,567 

313 

12,000 

12,000 

9 

425 

200 

225 

25 

0) 

P) 

P> 

0) 

P) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

P) 

P) 

P) 

P) 

P) 

P) 

P) 

10 

354 

170 

184 

12 

3 

9 

12 


9,080 


591 

8,352 

137 

8,705 

8,705 


32,800 

31,500 

1,300 

11 

200 

200 







2,200 


2,000 

200 


2,200 

2,200 


6,500 

6,500 

12 

420 

150 

270 

25 

10 

15 

25 


3,200 

1,800 

100 

600 

700 

4,400 

4,000 

400 

25,000 

20,000 

5,000 

13 

735 

308 

« 

25 

12 

13 

20 

5 

27,528 

5,900 

1,674 

9,031 

10,923 

27,266 

26,965 

301 

705,300 

500,000 

205,300 

14 

225 

100 

125 

11 

5 

6 

H 


4,960 

960 


4,000 


4,960 

4,960 





15 

880 

371 

. 

509 

58 

21 

37 

53 

5 

0) 


P) 

0) 

0) 

P) 

P) 

P) 

P) 

P) 

P) 

16 

178 

78 

100 

14 

6 

8 

14 


0) 


0) 

1,500 

0) 

8,600 

4,100 

4,500 

10,000 

8,000 

2,000 

17 

91 

46 

45 

37 

20 

17 

37 


27,571 

19,753 

7,818 

30,460 

19,003 

11,457 

50,000 

50,000 


18 

179 

89 

90 

9 

4 

5 

9 


8 5,195 


3,441 

1,354 

400 

3 5,195 

5,045 

150 

>16,000 

8,000 

8,000 

19 

240 

173 

67 

8 

0) 

0) 

0) 

P) 

0) 

P) 

( l ) 

300 

P) 

P) 

P) 

P) 

P) 

P) 

20 

554 

291 

263 

25 

16 

9 

25 


18,944 

2,000 

143 

16,276 

525 

P) 

16,612 

P) 

66,800 

59,850 

6,950 

21 

673 

0) 

P) 

28 

P) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

P) 

0) 

P) 

P) 

P) 

P) 

P) 

P) 

22 

( 5 ) 

(i) 


(i) 

(1) 


(i) 


(1) 


0) 



( 5 ) 

P) 

P) 

P) 

P) 

P) 

23 

403 

403 


11 

11 


11 


(1) 

(!) 

0) 


P) 

P) 

P) 

P) 

P) 


24 

59 

25 

34 

2 

2 

1 

1 

2,419 

1,146 


1,273 


2,424 

2,424 

20,000 

20,000 


25 

0) 

0) 

0) 

o) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

P) 

P) 

P) 

P) 

P) 

P) 

P) 

26 

125 

65 

60 

10 

o 

4 

10 


4,000 



4,000 


4,000 

4,000 


8 15,000 

8 15,000 


27 

1,133 

632 

501 

43 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

3 31,928 

15,000 

1,546 

14,771 

611 

>31,898 

29,136 

2,762 

>150,000 

150,000 


28 

9 HQ 

110 


5 

5 


5 


10,739 

10,739 




10,739 

P) 

P) 

P) 

P) 


29 

53 

20 

33 






840 

250 

176 

278 

136 

871 

871 


10,000 

10,000 


30 

662 

334 

328 

20 

6 

14 

o) 

P) 

18,546 

1,600 

11,405 

5,541 


7,714 

7,392 

322 

20,000 

10,000 

10,000 

31 

P) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

P) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

P) 

P) 

P) 

P) 

P) 

P) 

P) 

1 

oi n 

91 n 


10 

10 


10 


(1) 

0) 


(1) 


P) 

P) 

P) 

P) 

P) 


2 

250 

107 

143 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 


P) 

2,400 

P) 

P) 

P) 

52,000 

52,000 


3 

1,410 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

P) 

0) 

0) 

0) 



0) 


P) 

P) 

P) 

P) 

P) 

P) 

4 


• Instruction for Hospital Corps. 8 Land owned by city. 

i Enlisted men, Hospital Corps. 9 Exclusive of out-patients. 




























































































































































336 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table IV.— HOSPITALS AND 







Ui 

3 

& 


MEDICAL STAFF 

NURSES AT CLOSE 









AT CLOSE 

OF 

OF YEAR. 

i 





o 

CO 


\ E A K . 





0 

a 

o 

§ 

3 

-*-> 

GO 

NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of cases treated. 

T3 

© 

'O 

3 

3 

u 

a 

o . 

■s $ 
w '£ 

3 
b£ O 

1 

B 

cj 

3 

•2-d 
•£ ® 
Pi-3 
© 

O 

© 

M 

O 

umber of beds 

73 

o 

•*-» 

a 

© 

TJ 

8 

ti 

.0 

3 

*3 

O 

© 

"3 

© 

*3 

a 

© 

a 




(h 


o 

Z 

E-> 

PS 

> 

H 

a 

P. 


NORTH DAKOTA—Continued. 














Grafton: 













5 

Grafton Deaconess Hospital. 

United Norwegian Lutheran 
Church. 

General. 

1902 

No. 

Yes. 

15 

8 

s 

5 

3 


3 


Hill Ave. and Tenth St. 









Grand Forks: 












12 

6 

Grand Forks Deaconess Hospital.. 
Fourth St. and Belmont Ave. 

Private corporation (Lu¬ 
theran). 

General.. 

1899 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

17 


17 

12 







(>) 

0) 

7 

St. Michaels’ Hospital. 

Sisters of St. Joseph. 

(i). 

(') 

0) 

0) 

0) 

(>) 

(») 

C 1 ) 

0) 


Lisbon: 



8 

Lisbon Hospital... 

Private organization. 

General, except contagious 
and insane. 

1903 

Yes. 

No. 

7 

3 

1 

2 

3 


3 

Mayville: 














9 

Mayville Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1898 

No. 

0) 

10 

5 


5 

2 


2 

Northwood: 








12 

10 

Northwood Deaconess Hospital.... 

United Norwegian Lutheran 
Church. 

General. 

1902 

Yes. 

Yes. 

30 

10 

2 

8 

12 









Rugby: 













11 

Good Samaritan Hospital. 

United Norwegian Lutheran 
Church. 

(i) . 

1905 

Yes. 

Yes. 

32 

1 


1 

9 


9 

OHIO. 















Akron: 












30 

1 

City Hospital of Akron. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1892 

Yes. 

Yes. 

80 

37 

2 

35 

30 



"511 East Market St. 






Alliance: 













2 

Alliance City Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except alcoholic, 
contagious, and incurable. 

1900 

Yes. 

Yes. 

20 

16 


16 

5 


5 


College St. 







Canal Dover: 













3 

Union Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General.... 

1906 

Yes. 

Yes. 

20 




6 


6 


Reeves"Heights. 








Canton: 













4 

Aultman Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1892 

Yes. 

Yes. 

60 

27 


27 

14 


14 


325 South Clarendon Ave. 





Chillicothe: 













5 

Chillicothe Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1895 

No. 

Yes. 

28 




6 


6 


Chestnut and Cherry Sts. 








Cincinnati: 













6 

Bethesda Hospital. 

Methodist Episcopal Church. 

General. 

1896 

Yes. 

Yes. 

85 

26 

2 

24 

48 


48 


Oak St. and Reading Road. 




7 

Children’s Hospital. 

Protestant Episcopal Church 

General.... 

1883 

Yes. 

Yes. 

70 

7 


7 

11 


11 


North Main St. (Mount Au- 







bum). 













8 

Christ Hospital. 

Methodist Deaconess Asso- 

General. 

1889 

Yes. 

Yes. 

120 

20 


20 

104 

52 

52 

2139 Auburn Ave. 

ciation. 



9 

Cincinnati Hospital. 

City of Cincinnati. 

General. 

1822 

Yes. 

Yes. 

760 

76 

1 

75 

118 

4 

114 

Twelfth SL and Central Ave. 




10 

Cincinnati Tuberculosis Hospital.. 
Lick Run Pike. 

City of Cincinnati. 

Tubercular. 

1907 

No. 

Yes. 

325 

2 

1 

1 

18 


18 





11 

German Deaconess Home and 

Evangelical Protestant Dea¬ 
coness Society. 

General. 

1888 

No. 

Yes. 

50 

17 

2 

15 

26 

1 

25 

Hospital. 





Clifton Ave. and Straight St. 












12 

Good Samaritan Hospital. 

Sisters of Charity. 

General. 

1852 

Yes. 

Yes. 

87 

28 

4 

24 

30 

2 

28 

Sixth and Lock Sts. 





13 

Jewish Hospital. 

Private association. 

General, except contagious 
and insane. 

1850 

Yes. 

Yes. 

150 

32 

4 

28 

38 

2 

36 

Bumet"Ave. 




14 

Ohio Hospital for Women and 
Children. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1868 

Yes. 

No. 

19 

5 


5 

2 


2 










549 West Seventh St. 













15 

Ohio Maternity Hospital 5 . 

Evangelical Protestant Dea¬ 
coness Society. 

Maternity cases and general 
for children. 

1893 

Yes. 

Yes. 

46 

4 


4 

9 


9 

529 East Liberty St. 






16 

Ophthalmic Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

Eye, ear, nose, and throat... 

1S90 

No. 

Yes. 

24 

10 


10 

10 


10 

210 West Twelfth St. 




17 

St. Francis Hospital. 

Sisters of the Poor of St. 

General, except contagious.. 

1888 

No. 

Yes. 

366 

8 


s 

46 

8 

38 

Queen City Ave. 

Francis. 




18 

St. Joseph’s Maternity Hospital... 
Tennessee Ave. and Reading 

Sisters of Charity. 

Obstetrical. 

1873 

(■) 

C 1 ) 

0) 

0) 

( l ) 

( l ) 

(>) 

(‘) 

(*) 




Road (Norwood P. O.). 













19 

St. Mary’s Hospital. 

Sisters of the Poor of St. 

General, except contagious.. 

1859 

No. 

Yes. 

248 

25 

2 

23 

32 

15 

17 

800 "Betts St. 

Francis. 


20 

Seton Hospital. 

Sisters of Charity. 

General. 

1900 

Yes. 

No. 

60 

42 


42 

24 

2 

22 

618 West Sixth St. 






Cleveland: 













21 

Cleveland City Hospital. 

City of Cleveland. 

General, except insane and 
tubercular. 

1888 

Yes. 

(•) 

275 

69 

14 

55 

45 


45 

Scranton Road." 



22 

Cleveland City Hospital Tubercu¬ 
lar Sanatorium. 

City of Cleveland. 

Pulmonary tubercular. 

1900 

Yes. 

Yes. 

90 

11 

3 

8 

8 


8 






Scranton Road. 













23 

German Hospital 10 . 

Private corporation (Re¬ 
formed churches). 

General. 

1892 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

8 

2 

6 

14 

13 

1 

3305 Franklin Ave. 





24 

Huron Road Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1866 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

17 

3 

14 

C 1 ) 

(») 

25 

Huron Road." 





25 

Lakeside Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1863 

Yes. 

Yes. 

269 

27 

19 

8 

90 


90 

1235 Lakeside Ave. 




26 

Lutheran Hospital. 

Private corporation (Luther¬ 
an). 

Surgical, obstetrical, and ty¬ 
phoid fever. 

1896 

Yes. 

Yes. 

36 

22 

18 

4 

10 


10 

2609 Franklin Ave., NW. 



27 

Maternitv Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

Obstetrical. 

1891 

Yes. 

Yes. 

14 

7 

1 

6 

10 


10 

2364 East Fifty-fifth St. 







28 

Mount Sinai Hospital. 

Federation of Jewish Chari- 

General, except contagious.. 

1903 

Yes. 

Yes. 

25 

23 

1 

22 

8 


8 

2371 East Thirty-seventh St. 

ties. 


29 

St. Alexis Hospital. 

Sisters of Third Order of St. 

General. 

1884 

No. 

Yes. 

250 

25 

7 

18 

42 

12 

30 

5163 Broadway. 

St. Ann’s Maternity Hospital. 

Francis. 

Sisters of Charity of St. Au¬ 
gustine. 

Obstetrical. 

1 

30 

1S73 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

7 

6 

30 


30 

3509 Woodland" Ave. * 




1 Not reported. < Includes report of dispensary and of Ohio Maternity Hospital. 

2 Buildings and equipment. # Children received. 

3 Includes report of dispensary. 3 Included in report of German Deaconesses Home and Hospital. 






















































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


337 


SANITARIUMS: 1910—Continued. 


PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING YEAR. 

PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 

RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 

PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Adults 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

Total. 

Appro¬ 

pria¬ 

tions. 

Derived 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

from— 

Care of 
patients. 

Other 

sources. 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

165 

80 

85 

14 

8 

6 

12 

2 

$5, 714 


$250 

$5,464 


$4,458 

$4,458 


523 

238 

285 

25 

14 

11 

25 


17,859 


15,259 

$2,600 

19,106 

14,456 

$4,650 

( l ) 

0) 

0) 

( l ) 

C 1 ) 

(>) 

( l ) 

0) 

G) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

(») 

64 

24 

40 

2 

1 

1 

1 

1 

3,202 



3,202 


(!) 

(1) 

0) 

54 

26 

28 

6 

3 

3 

4 

2 

2,011 

$126 

273 

1,130 

482 

1,730 

1,678 

52 

505 

239 

266 

8 

5 

3 

7 

1 

17,666 


1,713 

14,062 

1,891 

17,748 

14,098 

3,650 

383 

170 

213 

22 

11 

11 

20 

2 

13,038 


1,587 

11,451 


13,011 

12,702 

309 

2,045 

1,240 

805 

70 

45 

25 

70 


58,459 

17,946 

518 

28,490 

11,505 

61,097 

61,097 


320 

193 

127 

13 

11 

2 

13 


7,211 

518 

964 

5,622 

107 

8,173 

8,173 


172 

74 

9S 

12 

5 

7 

11 

1 

4,847 


600 

4,247 


4,685 

4,685 


581 

361 

220 

21 

9 

12 

18 

3 

20,404 

5,231 

100 

9,002 

6,071 

13,320 

13,320 


300 

177 

123 

11 

0) 

0) 

w 

0) 

8,243 

1,911 

2,002 

3,707 

623 

8,146 

8,146 


1,054 

276 

778 

56 

17 

39 

55 

1 

75,108 


14,753 

47,708 

12,647 

73,108 

52,006 

21,102 

357 

200 

157 

41 

22 

19 


41 

38,387 


7,037 


31,350 

13,560 

13,113 

447 

1,513 

541 

972 

62 

21 

41 

49 

13 

54,987 


5,922 

46,315 

2,750 

55,012 

55,012 


8,901 

6,014 

2,887 

612 

459 

153 

526 

86 

251,992 

249,647 

1,242 

1,103 

242,440 

242,440 


766 

596 

170 

185 

150 

35 

178 

7 

78,000 

78,000 




78,000 

78,000 


714 

211 

503 

24 

5 

19 

22 

2 

s 28,571 

5,586 

20,397 

2,588 

3 28,780 

28,780 


1,520 

710 

810 

(!) 

(!) 

(i) 

(l) 


48,122 


510 

47,112 

500 

48,012 

48,012 


1,415 

605 

810 

65 

27 

38 

52 

13 

68,474 


5,411 

40,579 

22,484 

68,336 

64,736 

3,600 

2^10 


240 

5 


5 

4 

1 

5,306 


432 

2,603 

2,271 

5,337 

5,129 

208 

459 

118 

341 

44 

16 

28 

14 

30 

6,906 



6,906 

(‘) 

6,909 

(l) 

4,842 

2,134 

2,708 

10 

4 

6 

10 


2,875 


2,600 

150 

125 

4,950 

4,800 

150 

1,077 

597 

480 

338 

156 

182 

306 

32 

23,323 


7 6,944 

9,620 

6,759 

23,256 

17,854 

5,402 

0) 

(0 

0) 

(0 

0) 

C 1 ) 

(') 

0) 

0) 

(») 

« 

(') 

(») 

0) 

( l ) 

0) 

) 2,103 

1,240 

863 

191 

96 

95 

180 

11 

23,032 


7 8,286 

9,291 

5,455 

22,346 

15,469 

6,877 

800 

348 

452 

42 

30 

12 

42 


0) 

0) 

( l ) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

3,600 

2,160 

1,440 

270 

172 

98 

240 

30 

8 260,339 

236,353 


23,596 

390 

6 223,810 

210,998 

12,812 

512 

3S4 

128 

91 

66 

25 

90 

1 

( 9 ) 

( 8 ) 


( 9 ) 

( 9 ) 

( 9 ) 

( 9 ) 

( 9 ) 

626 

32fi 

300 

37 

17 

20 

31 

6 

21,611 


5,499 

16,112 


20,531 

15,446 

5,085 

1 187 

590 

597 

49 

IS 

31 

4S 

1 

43,284 


222 

40,689 

2,373 

51,050 

51,050 

3,726 

1,770 

1,956 

204 

108 

96 

183 

21 

3 193,000 


3 18,000 

95,000 

3 80,000 

3 193,000 

185,000 

8,000 


195 

263 

14 

5 

9 

14 


12,750 


296 

12,454 


13,084 

13,084 


IQ? 

197 

15 


15 

15 


7,462 


1,224 

5,999 

239 

7,366 

7,366 


530 

200 

330 

20 

s 

12 

20 


9,000 


4,500 

4,500 


9,200 

9,200 



1 rra* 

180 

70 

. 

60 

116 

14 

51,994 


12,160 

39,229 

605 

51,327 

51,327 


697 


697 

75 

75 

75 

39,448 


1,549 

21,513 

16,386 

28,505 

25,991 

2,514 


VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

$13,000 

$13,000 


5 

50,000 

50,000 


6 

( l ) 

(') 

C) 

7 

6,000 

6,000 


8 

0) 

4,000 

(') 

9 

37,000 

37,000 


10 

65,033 

60,150 

$4,883 

11 

344,675 

7 230,000 

114,675 

1 

23,300 

20,000 

3,300 

2 

20,000 

20,000 


3 

150,000 

50,000 

100,000 

4 

35,000 

35,000 


5 

411,390 

404,390 

7,000 

6 

245,000 

125,000 

120,000 

7 

600,000 

600,000 


8 

2,317,663 

2,317,663 


9 

400,000 

400,000 


10 

<121,299 

116,837 

4,462 

11 

75,000 

75,000 


12 

325,001 

300,000 

25,001 

13 

20,000 

20,000 


14 

( 8 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

15 

47,000 

45,000 

2,000 

16 

170,000 

170,000 


17 

0) 

W 

0) 

18 

100,000 

100,000 


19 

0) 

0) 

0) 

20 

e 375,400 

375,400 


21 

( 9 ) 

( 9 ) 


22 

75,000 

75,000 


23 

332,500 

285,000 

47,500 

24 

2,750,000 

1,250,000 

1,500,000 

25 

26,500 

26,500 


26 

3,975 


3,975 

27 

10,000 

10,000 


28 

175,000 

175,000 


29 

5,000 

5,000 


30 


i Exclusive of donations other than cash. 

8 Includes report of Cleveland City Hospital Tubercular Sanitarium. 
’ Included in report of Cleveland City Hospital. 


Change in fiscal year; statistics for nine months, 
u Exclusive of out-patients. 


44153°—14-22 



















































































































































338 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 


Table IV.— HOSPITALS AND 




% 



t-l 

a 

<b 


MEDICAL STAFF 

NURSES AT CLOSE 

• 








AT CLOSE 

OF 

OF YEAR. 

£ 





•—* 

o 

C/0 


Y EAK. 





a 

3 

3 

NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of cases treated. 

© 

TJ 

o . 

'o © 

I-e 

11 

■8 

& 







o 

■4-i 

3 




3 

3 

3, 

hr 3 

.s 

© 

© 

u* 

© 

& 


4-3 

3 

© 

th 

3_ 



© 

03 

00 




a 

© 

.3 

d 

o 

a 

3 

c3 

o 

1 

w 

3 

03 

O 

*3 

s 

© 

9 





Pi 

8 


p 

P5 

> 

P 

a 



O HIO—Continued. 














Cleveland—C ontinued. 












9 

31 

St. Clair Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except infectious... 

1891 

Yes. 

Yes. 

60 

2! 

4 

17 

18 

9 

4422 St. Clair Ave. 




12 



15 

32 

St. John’s Hospital. 

Sisters of Third Order of St. 

General. 

1892 

No. 

Yes. 

75 

14 

2 

15 


7911 Detroit Ave. 

Francis. 




15 



39 

33 

34 

St. Luke’s Hospital. 

Private corporation (Metho¬ 
dist Episcopal). 

Sisters of Charity of St. Au- 

General. 

1906 

Yes. 

Yes. 

90 

19 

4 

40 

i 

6606 Carnegie Ave., SE. 

St. Vincent’s Charity Hospital_ 

General, except contagious.. 

1865 

Yes. 

Yes. 

138 

17 

9 

8 

63 

3 

60 


East Twenty-second St. and 

gustine. 












Central Ave. 












35 

U. S. Marine Hospital.. 

IT. S. Government. 

General. 

1843 

No. 

Yes. 

65 

3 

3 


4 

4 


Lakeside Ave'. 










Columbus: 












12 

36 

Children’s Hospital... 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1892 

Yes. 

Yes. 

40 

12 

2 

10 

12 


Fair and Miller Aves. 








72 

37 

Grant Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1900 

Yes. 

Yes. 

200 

S2 

2 

80 

74 

2 

125 South Grant Ave. 







38 

Lawrence Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1899 

Yes. 

Yes. 

20 

19 


19 

6 


6 

423 East Town St. 








39 

Mercy Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1904 

Yes. 

Yes. 

25 

24 

9 

15 

8 


8 

1430 South High St. 







68 

40 

Mount Carmel Hospital. 

Sisters of the Holy Cross. 

General. 

1886 

Yes. 

Yes. 

250 

64 

4 

60 

68 


West State St." 








41 

Protestant Hospital.. 

Private corporation (Metho¬ 
dist Episcopal). 

Sisters of the Poor of St. 

G eneral.... 

1892 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

24 

3 

21 

44 


44 

42 

700 Park St. 

St. Anthony’s Hospital. 

General, except contagious.. 

1891 

No. 

Yes. 

227 

10 


10 

36 

8 

28 

Hawthorne St. and Taylor 

Francis. 






Ave. 













43 

St. Francis Hospital. 

Sisters of the Poor of St. 

General, except contagious.. 

1865 

No. 

Yes. 

156 

17 

2 

15 

34 

8 

26 

Sixth and State Sts. 

Francis. 







44 

Tuberculosis Camp . 

County of Franklin. 

Incipient tubercular.... 

1909 

No. 

Yes. 

32 

1 


1 

3 


3 

45 

U. S. Army Recruit Depot Hospital 
Recruit Depot. 

U. S. Government._ 

General. 

1882 

( 5 ) 

Yes. 

145 

5 


5 

64 

' 64 









Dayton: 













46 

District Tuberculosis Hospital.... 

Counties of Montgomery and 

Pulmonary tubercular.. 

1909 

No. 

Yes. 

24 

1 


1 

2 


2 


R. D. No. 13. 

Preble. 











47 

Miami Valley Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1890 

Yes. 

Yes. 

150 

26 

2 

24 

53 

4 

49 

Apple St. 

St. Elizabeth’s Hospital. 

Sisters of the Poor of St. 

General, except contagious.. 

3 

16 

26 

44 

48 

1878 

No. 

Yes. 

450 

19 

70 

Hopeland St. 

Francis. 





East Liverpool: 













49 

East Liverpool City Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1893 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

24 


24 

14 


14 

Sixth Sst. 








Elyria: 













50 

Elyria Memorial Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1907 

Yes. 

Yes. 

42 

12 


12 

17 


17 

” East River St. 






Findlay: 













51 

Home and Hospital... 

City of Findlay. 

General, except contagious.. 

1900 

Yes. 

Yes. 

30 

20 


20 

10 


10 

South Main St. 





Gallipolis: 













52 

Ohio Hospital for Epileptics. 

State of Ohio. 

Epileptic and epileptic in¬ 
sane. 

1S91 

Yes. 

Yes. 

1,425 

10 

6 

4 

108 

47 

61 

Geneva: 














53 

Geneva Emergency Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1903 

No. 

Yes. 

6 

8 


8 

2 


2 

6 Forest. 







Hamilton: 













54 

Mercy Hospital. 

Sisters of Mercy. 

General. 

1892 

Yes. 

Yes. 

125 

40 


40 

18 

2 

16 

116 Dayton St. 






Ironton: 













55 

Charles S.Gray Deaconess Hospital 
Fourth arid Quincy Sts. 

Private corporation. 

Geperal, except contagious.. 

1898 

No. 

Yes. 

11 

19 


19 

4 


4 







Kenton: 













56 

St. Antonio Hospital. 

Sisters of Charity. 

General. 

1897 

Yes. 

Yes. 

25 

16 


16 

8 


8 

North and Wayne Sts. 






Lima : 













57 

Lima Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious 
and tubercular. 

1899 

Yes. 

Yes. 

68 

14 

8 

6 

18 


18 

Market and Scott Sts. 





Lorain: 













58 

St. Joseph’s Hospital. 

Sisters of St. Francis. 

General. 

1899 

Yes. 

Yes. 

80 

16 

16 


15 


15 

Broadway. 






Mansfield: 













59 

Emergency Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1902 

No. 

No. 

13 




4 


4 

West Third "St. 










Martins Ferry: 













60 

Martins Ferry Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1903 

Yes. 

Yes. 

27 

7 


7 

7 


7 

81 NorthThirdSt. 









Massillon: 













61 

City Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1910 

Yes. 

Yes. 

24 

9 


9 

9 


9 

1408 Akron St. 















Mount Vernon: 













62 

Ohio State Sanatorium. 

State of Ohio. 

Incipient tubercular. 

1909 

No. 

Yes. 

120 

2 

2 


5 


5 

63 

Newark: 

Newark Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1898 

Yes. 

Yes. 

20 

12 


12 

9 


9 

Wyoming St. 







Oberlin: 













64 

Oberlin Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1906 

No. 

Yes. 

8 

8 


8 

4 


4 

21 South Cedar St. 







Painesville: 













o5 

Painesville Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1902 

Yes. 

Yes. 

25 

27 

24 

3 

10 


10 

108 East Washington St. 





1 Includes report of dispensary. 3 Not reported. 

2 Exclusive of out-patients. * Exclusive of donations other than cash. 

































































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


339 


SANITARIUMS: 1910—Continued. 


PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING YEAR. 

PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE 

OF YEAR. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Adults 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

950 

695 

255 

44 

25 

19 

44 


1,117 

679 

438 

39 

22 

17 

38 

1 

2,940 

1,694 

1,246 

86 

5 

81 

78 

8 

2,435 

1,269 

1,166 

102 

43 

59 

102 


M66 

466 


26 

26 


26 


371 

188 

183 

31 

12 

19 


31 

2,248 

928 

1,320 

102 

40 

62 

99 

3 

300 

110 

190 

8 

2 

6 

6 

2 

267 

106 

161 

15 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( s ) 

1,800 

787 

1,013 

100 

57 

43 

78 

22 

1,660 

( s ) 

(«) 

75 

33 

42 

70 

5 

1,245 

563 

682 

193 

80 

113 

191 

2 

1,575 

1,198 

377 

123 

90 

33 

119 

4 

76 

41 

35 

27 

14 

13 

17 

10 

2,443 

2,440 

3 

44 

44 


44 


71 

43 

28 

24 

12 

12 

24 


1,981 

970 

1,011 

91 

42 

49 

83 

8 

3,229 

2,006 

1,223 

416 

257 

159 

406 

10 

441 

233 

208 

30 

16 

14 

30 


504 

257 

247 

15 

8 

7 

13 

2 

222 

55 

167 

3 


3 

3 


1,761 

982 

779 

1,425 

760 

665 

1,241 

184 

45 

25 

20 






777 

462 

315 

32 

18 

14 

30 

2 

64 

32 

32 

6 

2 

4 

6 


230 

80 

150 

24 

12 

12 

13 

11 

984 

496 

488 

39 

19 

20 

37 

2 

650 

400 

250 

50 

30 

20 

35 

15 

175 

88 

87 

7 

4 

3 

7 


190 

156 

34 

( s > 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

c 3 ) 

7t» 

( s ) 

( a ) 

8 

( 3 > 

( 3 ) 

8 


100 

51 

49 

48 

24 

24 

48 


266 

131 

135 

12 

6 

6 

12 


110 

43 

67 

2 


2 

2 


230 

126 

104 

18 

10 

8 

15 

3 


Total. 


$20,523 

19,265 

63,885 

60,271 

20,573 

19,810 

112,014 

5,624 

6,505 

70,250 

83,000 

23,114 

15,273 
6 9,099 

10,988 

96,242 

57,841 

17,874 

131,213 

7,531 

296,200 

1,550 

22,088 

3,150 

4,333 

23,476 

15,595 

8,077 

5,957 

7,290 

53,364 
8,174 

4,446 

10,489 


RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 


Derived from— 


Appro¬ 

pria¬ 

tions. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
patients. 

Other 

sources. 


$1,035 

$19,488 



642 

16,747 

$1,876 


8,350 

55,535 


$20,573 

3,474 

51,066 

5,731 

250 


9,560 



112,014 


4 10 

5,614 




6,461 

44 


250 

70,000 



25,000 

45,000 

13,000 


^ 7,627 

10,964 

4,523 


4 6,300 

4,800 

4,173 

5 9,099 




(3) 


( 3 ) 


9,151 


1,837 


28,125 

30,240 

30,930 

6,947 

28,125 

5,946 

16,700 

7,070 

4,545 

884 


12,445 


9,039 

12,468 

9,706 

1,690 


5,841 


283,811 


12,389 

200 

350 

1,000 

8,562 


13,526 


1,100 

50 

2,000 


30 

164 

4,139 


5,500 

160 

17,213 

603 

1,011 

250 

14,199 

135 

3,500 

434 

3,748 

395 


200 

5,232 

525 

3,642 


2,198 

1,450 

46,439 


6,284 

641 

2,162 


6.012 


1,352 

3,011 

83 

2,875 

110 

4,885 

2,619 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

2 







a 



For 


Land, 


« 


For 

perm a- 


build- 

In- 

a 

o 

Total. 

running 

ex- 

nent 

im- 

Total. 

mgs, 

and 

vested 

funds. 

"3 


penses. 

prove- 


equip- 


4-> 



ments. 


ment. 


a 







>—» 

$22,423 

$22,423 


$36,000 

$36,000 


31 

20,472 

16,472 

$4,000 

70,000 

70,000 


32 

53,444 

53,444 


1 176,083 

176,083 


33 

59,648 

56,485 

3,163 

350,000 

350,000 


34 

20,573 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


35 

19,004 

9,004 


1 227,863 

60,000 

$167,863 

36 

242,008 

112,008 

130,000 

300,000 

300,000 


37 

5,302 

5,234 

68 

20,000 

20,000 


38 

6,327 

6,327 


10,000 

10,000 


39 

70,060 

55,060 

15,000 

500,000 

500,000 


40 

65,000 

45,000 

20,000 

143,000 

103,000 

40,000 

41 

23,054 

19,558 

3,496 

202,100 

202,100 


42 

15,088 

12,280 

2,808 




43 

5 9 099 

9,099 

130,000 

130,000 


44 

( 3 ) 

( 3 $ 

( s ) 

( 3 ) 

(»5 


45 

10,988 

8,050 

8 2,938 

83,000 

83,000 


46 

85,382 

80,709 

4,673 

302,250 

250,000 

52,250 

47 

56,300 

39,974 

16,326 

240,000 

240,000 


48 

17,875 

17,875 


( 3 > 

25,119 

( 3 > 

49 

130,896 

17,396 

13,500 

1 100,000 

100,000 


50 

7,279 

7,279 


25,000 

25,000 


51 

296,200 

270,609 

25,591 

1,400,000 

1,400,000 


52 

950 

800 

150 

2,000 

2,000 


53 

21,480 

20,655 

825 

169,265 

169,265 


54 

3,100 

3,100 


15,000 

15,000 


55 

4,170 

4,170 


24,000 

24,000 


56 

21,987 

16,012 

5,975 

41,000 

40,000 

1,000 

57 

15,410 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

85,000 

85,000 


58 

6,724 

6,724 


16,189 

15,189 

1,000 

59 

5,862 

5,362 

500 

20,000 

20,000 


60 

5,964 

5,964 


170,000 

150,000 

20,000 

61 

53,349 

53,349 


689,478 

689,478 


62 

6,973 

6,973 



63 

4,209 

4,209 


3,918 

8 2,000 

1,918 

64 

9,100 

7,917 

1,183 

45,000 

35,000 

10,000 

65 


* Exclusive of $100,000 for new building. 
6 Instruction for Hospital Corps. 


7 Enlisted men, Hospital Corps. 

8 Equipment. 



























































































































































340 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table IV.— HOSPITALS AND 


£ 

a 

s 

a 

a 

o 


G6 

67 

68 

69 

70 

71 

72 

73 

74 

75 

76 

77 

78 

79 

80 
81 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 






U 

a 

© 

t- 


MEDICAL STAFF 
AT CLOSE OF 

VFAP 

NURSES AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 





O 

a 








NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of cases treated. 

T3 

© 

'O 

o . 

A co 

O © 

W CO 

H 

.§ * 

C3 

© 

A 

*o 










a 

d 

& 

u 

8 

be S3 

.3 

.9 

a 

© 

© 

u 

o 

u* 

© 

A 

a 

d 

*oS 

4-a 

o 

4-3 

d 

a> 

2 

"to 

© 

si 

a 

3 

*3 

4-3 

o 

© 

03 

© 

a 

© 




i* 

Eh 

o 

z 

Eh 

P5 

> 

Eh 

a 

Ph 

OHIO—Continued. 













Piqua: 













Memorial Hospital. 

Private corporation. _ 

General, except chronic, con¬ 
tagious, tubercular, and 

1905 

Yes. 

Yes. 

26 




9 


9 

West Park Ave. 







Sandusky: 


insane, 











Detention Hospital... 

City of Sandusky. 

Contagious. 

1905 

No. 

Yes. 

15 

1 


i 




Fifth St. 

Good Samaritan Hospital. 

Grace Episcopal Church.... 

General. 

1876 

Yes. 

Yes. 

22 

12 


12 

11 


11 

Fulton and Van Buren Sts. 







Providence Hospital. 

Sisters of Charitv. 

General, except contagious.. 

1902 

Yes. 

Yes. 

28 

G> 


G) 

13 


13 

Hayes Ave.” 





Springfield: 













Sprinefield Citv Hospital.. 

City of Springfield (Snyder 
Trust). 

General. 

1887 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

8 

2 

6 

21 


21 

York and East Sts. 





Steubenville: 












Gill Hospital. 

Private association. 

General, except contagious.. 

1898 

Yes. 

Yes. 

20 




8 


8 

Sixth Ave. 







Toledo: 













Maternity Hospital 2 . 

Private corporation. 

Maternity cases, and general 
for children under 2 years. 

1884 

Yes. 

Yes. 

41 

4 


4 

7 


7 

1609 Summit St. 








Robinwood Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious 
and insane. 

1893 

Yes. 

Yes. 

60 

18 

1 

17 

IS 

2 

16 

Delaware and Robinwood A ves. 





St. Vincent's Hospital. 

Sisters of Charity (Grey 
Nuns). 

General. 

1855 

Yes. 

Yes. 

175 

45 

4 

41 

69 

9 

60 

Cherry St. 




Toledo Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except chronic and 
contagious. 

1874 

Yes. 

Yes. 

150 

204 

4 

200 

35 


35 

1711 Cherry St. 





Toledo Pesthouse. 

City of Toledo.... 

Contagious. 

G) 

No. 

Yes. 

40 

1 


1 




Warren: 





• 



Warren City Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1905 

Yes. 

Yes. 

35 

12 


12 

11 


11 

East Market St. 





Warrensville: 













Cleveland Detention Hospital 

Stop 19. 

City of Cleveland. 

Smallpox. 

1896 

No. 

Yes. 

80 

4 

2 

2 

1 


1 








Youngstown: 













Youngstown Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, exceptehronic, con¬ 
tagious, and venereal. 

1882 

Yes. 

Yes. 

150 

14 

4 

10 

44 

5 

39 

Francis St. 




Zanesville: 












Bethesda Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1891 

Yes. 

Yes. 

36 

G) 


( l ) 

9 


9 

Eaton and Underwood Sts. 





Good Samaritan Hospital. 

Franciscan Sisters of Charity 

General, except contagious.. 

1900 

Yes. 

Yes. 

60 

20 


20 

15 

1 

14 

Ashland Ave. 


OKLAHOMA. 













Fort Sill: 













U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1869 

( 6 ) 

Yes. 

48 

1 

1 


15 

6 14 

1 

McAlester: 





All Saints’ Hospital. 

Episcopal Church. 

General, except contagious.. 

1895 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

13 

1 

12 

14 

3 

11 

600 West Grand Ave. 



Mercv Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1903 

Yes. 

Yes. 

34 

10 

2 

8 

8 


8 

Oklahoma: 




Oklahoma Pasteur Institute. 

Private individual. 

Hydrophobic. 

1906 

No. 

Yes. 


1 

i 





411 West Reno Ave. 









St. Anthony’s Hospital. 

Sisters of St. Francis. 

General, except contagious.. 

1898 

Yes. 

Yes. 

120 

26 


26 

24 

2 

22 

600 West Ninth St. 




Tulsa: 













Tulsa Hospital. 

Private organization 

(i) . 

1906 

G) 

0) 

G> 

G> 

(*) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

Lawton and West Fifth Sts. 



OREGON. 













Albany: 













St. Mary’s Hospital. 

Sisters of Mercy. 

General, except contagious.. 

1906 

No. 

Yes. 

20 

6 


6 

4 


4 

Astoria: 






St. Mary’s Hospital. 

Sisters of Charity of Provi¬ 
dence. 

General, except plague and 
smallpox. 

1880 

Yes. 

Yes. 

126 

10 


10 

20 

3 

17 




Baker: 













St. Elizabeth’s Hospital. 

Sisters of St. Francis. 

General. 

1897 

No. 

Yes. 

32 

12 


12 

8 

1 

7 

Fort Stevens: 






U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1898 

( 6 ) 

Yes. 

32 

1 

i 


11 

6 11 


Pendleton: 






St. Anthony’s Hospital. 

Sisters of St. Francis. 

General. 

1902 

Yes. 

Yes. 

30 

8 


8 

11 

1 

10 

Portland: 




Good Samaritan Hospital. 

Private organization (Epis¬ 
copal). 

General, except contagious.. 

1874 

Yes. 

Yes. 

230 

15 

6 

9 

90 


90 

Twenty-third and Lovejoy Sts. 


Multnomah Hospital. 

County of Multnomah... 

General. 

1909 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

34 

2 

32 

16 

2 

14 

721 Second St. 





Open Air Sanatorium. 

Private corporation. 

Tubercular. 

1904 

No. 

No. 

36 

2 

i 

1 

3 


3 

Milwaukee Heights. 







St. Vincent’s Hospital. 

Sisters of Charity of Provi¬ 
dence. 

General. 

1875 

Yes. 

Yes. 

400 

30 

5 

25 

63 


63 

Cornell St. 




St. Vincent’s Sanatorium. 

Sisters of Charity of Provi¬ 
dence. 

Contagious, except smallpox. 

1901 

Yes. 

Yes. 

40 

0) 

G) 

G) 

6 


6 

Cornell St. 


Salem: 













Oregon State Tuberculosis Sana¬ 
torium. 

Oregon State Tubercular 
Commission. 

Tubercular. 

1910 

Yes. 

Yes. 

62 

2 

l 

1 

5 


5 







Salem Hospital. 

Willamette University. 

General. 

1896 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

10 

2 

8 

12 


12 

Asylum Ave. 






1 Not reported. * Open May 1-July 31; statistics for three months. 

2 Children treated. 6 Instruction for Hospital Corps. 

* Includes report of dispensary. 


























































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


341 


SANITARIUMS: 1910—Continued. 


PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING YEAR. 


PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 


rotal. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

248 

99 

149 

(») 

o) 

G) 

237 

g> 

( i ) 

347 

157 

190 

1,057 

(») 

0) 

g) 

(>) 

(*) 

249 

(*) 

g> 

406 

120 

286 

2,778 

1,236 

1,542 

2,177 

1,214 

963 

21 

11 

10 

432 

192 

240 

57 

27 

30 

2,642 

1,762 

880 

538 

186 

352 

785 

374 

411 

376 

315 

61 

752 

635 

117 

(>) 

g> 

G) 

53 

40 

13 

1,697 

(>) 

0) 

g> 

o 

<>) 

168 

100 

68 

579 

475 

104 

455 

292 

163 

420 

420 


472 

321 

151 

4,937 

2,957 

1,980 

720 

600 

120 

146 

80 

66 

4,891 

2,720 

2,171 

502 

348 

154 

49 

33 

16 

475 

155 

320 


RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 


Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Adults 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

Total. 

Derived from— 

Appro¬ 

pria¬ 

tions. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
patients. 

Other 

sources. 

15 

6 

9 

15 


$8,600 

$2,887 

$30 

$5,182 

$501 






600 

600 




21 

8 

13 

20 

1 

9,407 

400 

2,504 

5,223 

1,280 

22 

8 

14 

21 

1 

15,639 


2,053 

8,800 

4,786 

49 

G) 

o) 

G) 

o) 

56,390 

38,781 


17,053 

556' 

25 

G) 

(>) 

(>) 

G) 

0) 

(») 

G) 

c) 

G) 

28 

G) 

G) 

(>) 

G) 

5,841 

2,000 

600 

3,118 

• 123 

30 

12 

18 

28 

2 

16,000 

1,000 


15,000 


108 

48 

60 

103 

5 

70,415 

5,000 

1,715 

63,700 


65 

33 

32 

60 

5 

8 77,525 

4,958 

32,956 

38,232 

1,379 






3,130 

3,130 




19 

9 

10 

19 


18,388 

2,500 


15,888 







50,000 

50,000 



136 

91 

45 

125 

11 

68,292 

7,385 

400 

55,576 

4,931 

20 

0) 

G) 

10 

10 

11,673 

494 

1,999 

9,152 

28 

40 

23 

17 

38 

2 

23,176 

500 

4,833 

16,206 

1,637 

5 

5 


5 


0) 

o 


(!) 


11 

9 

2 

11 


14,617 

229 

12,352 

2,036 

21 

« 

G) 

G) 

0) 

15,438 



15,438 

1 

1 


1 


1,902 



1,902 


56 

o) 

G) 

G) 

« 

G) 

(») 

G) 

G) 

o 

o 

G) 

G) 

0 ) 

G) 

0) 

o) 

(>) 

0) 

o 

17 

9 

8 

13 

4 

G) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

G) 

74 

63 

11 

71 

3 

29,462 

3,329 

1,737 

14,471 

9,925 

30 

18 

12 

30 


14,269 


i 


14,269 


5 

5 


0) 

(i) 


(i) 

30 

21 

9 

30 


10,280 

35 

115 

10,130 


230 

149 

81 

223 

7 

168,444 


15,800 

148,144 

4,500 

Q7 


28 

77 

10 

19 040 

19,000 


40 


19 

10 

9 

17 

2 

25,863 

1,263 

24,540 

60 

352 

190 

162 

339 

13 

8 245,681 

2,196 

1,050 

135,035 

107,400 

39 

20 

19 

24 

15 

( 9 ) 

(*) 

( 9 ) 

( 9 ) 

( 9 ) 


97 

14 

38 

3 

20 000 

20,000 




49 

22 

27 

49 


c) 


15,000 

o) 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 


VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 


Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

§ 

a 

o 

•H 

•H 

+-> 

a 

n 

$8,985 

$8,785 

$200 

$50,000 

$40,000 

$10,000 

66 

516 

516 


6,000 

6,000 


67 

7,963 

6,825 

1,138 

29,395 

22,495 

6,900 

68 

15,878 

15,878 


60,000 

60,000 


69 

49,907 

48,560 

1,347 

270,000 

150,000 

120,000 

70 

G) 

(■) 

G) 

35,000 

35,000 


71 

7,302 

(0 

G) 

23,000 

23,000 


72 

16,000 

14,000 

2,000 

70,000 

70,000 


73 

69,469 

69,469 


300,000 

300,000 


74 

3 61,959 

60,076 

1,883 

3 161,473 

156,473 

5,000 

75 

2,357 

2,357 


33,025 

33,025 


76 

16,284 

15,444 

840 

49,300 

48,000 

1,300 

77 

50,000 

49,400 

600 

G) 

G) 

G) 

78 

70,304 

70,304 


280,167 

192,667 

87,500 

79 

11,367 

11,112 

255 

G) 

G) 

G) 

80 

22,988 

15,560 

7,428 

100,000 

100,000 


81 

(>) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 


1 

14,424 

13,948 

476 

G) 

20,000 

G) 

2 

15,500 

15,500 


10,000 

10,000 


3 

585 

485 

100 

7 250 

7 250 


4 

(») 

0) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

( l ) 

5 

(■) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

6 

o 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

1 

19,061 

15,046 

4,015 

114,000 

104,000 

10,000 

2 

14,101 

14,101 


15,000 

15,000 


3 

0) 

(*) 

G) 

G) 

G) 


4 

10,280 

9,780 

500 

55,000 

55,000 


5 

140,642 

135,942 

4, 700 

553,000 

450,000 

103,000 

6 

23,000 

19,000 

4,000 

100,000 

100,000 


7 

26,834 

25,696 

1,138 

31,450 

31,450 


8 

8 242,535 

115,321 

127,214 

8 450,000 

450,000 


9 

(») 

( 9 ) 

( 9 ) 

( 9 ) 

( 9 ) 


10 

58,672 

39,880 

18,792 

60,000 

60,000 


11 

12,903 

12,903 


35,000 

35,000 


12 





£ 


6 Enlisted men, Hospital Corps. 

7 Equipment. 


8 Includes report of St. Vincent's Sanatorium, 
s Included in report of St. Vincent’s Hospital. 































































































































Institution uumber. 


342 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table IV.— HOSPITALS AND 


1 

2 
3 


4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 


16 

17 

18 

19 

20 
21 
22 

23 

24 

25 

26 

27 

2S 

29 

30 

31 

32 

33 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


Supervised or conducted by— 


PENNSYLVANIA. 


ALLENTOWN: 

Allentown Hospital. 

Seventeenth and Chew Sts. 

Altoona: 

Altoona Hospital. 

Howard Ave. and Seventh St. 

Mercy Hospital 2 . 

Twenty-sixth St. and Eighth 
Ave. 

Austin: 

North Pennsylvania General Hos¬ 
pital and Sanitarium. 

Beaver Falls: 

Providence Hospital. 

Third Ave. and Ninth St. 

Bellefonte: 

Bellefonte Hospital. 

Willowbank St. 

Bellevue: 

Suburban General Hospital. 

Sherman Ave. 

Berwick: 

Berwick Hospital. 

Maple St. 

Bloomsburg: 

Joseph Ratti Hospital. 

687 Fifth St. 

Blossburg: 

State Hospital for Injured Persons 
of the Coal Region. 

Blue Ridge Summit: 

Blue Ridge Mountain Sanatorium. 

Braddock: 

Braddock Hospital. 

Holland Ave. 

Bradford: 

Bradford Hospital. 

200 Pleasant St. 

Bryn Mawr: 

Bryn Mawr Hospital. 

Butler: 

Butler County General Hospital.. 
South Main St. and Plank 
Road. 

Canonsburg: 

Canonsburg General Hospital. 

Cabbondale: 

Carbondale Emergency Hospital.. 
Hospital St. 

Carlisle: 

Todd Hospital. 

F and West Sts. 

Chambersburg: 

Chambersburg Hospital. 


Private corporation... 

Private corporation... 
Private corporation... 

Private corporation... 

Sisters of Charity. 

Private organization.. 
» 

Private corporation... 

Private corporation... 

Sisters of Mercy. 

State of Pennsylvania 

Private organization.. 
Private corporation... 

Private corporation... 

Private corporation... 
Private corporation.. 

(*) . 

Private corporation.. 

Private corporation.. 

Private corporation.. 


Chester: 

Chester Hospital. 

Ninth and Barclay Sts. 
Clearfield: 

Clearfield Hospital. 

Turnpike Ave. 

Coaldale: 

Panther Creek Valley Hospital.... 


Private corporation 


Private corporation 


Private corporation 


Coatesville: 

Coatesville Hospital. 

Columbia: 

Columbia Hospital. 

Seventh and Poplar Sts. 

Connells ville: 

Cottage State Hospital. 

Murphy and Cottage Aves. 

Corry: 

Corry Hospital. 

407 North Center St. 

Devon: 

Eliza Cathcart Home for Incur¬ 
ables. 

Richardson Home for Convales¬ 
cents.* 

Dubois: 

Dubois Hospital. 

West Scribner Ave. 

Easton: 

Easton Hospital. 

656 Wolf St. 

Erie: 

Hamot Hospital. 

Second and State Sts. 

Municipal Hospital. 

Second and Ross Sts. 

St. Vincent’s Hospital.. 

Twenty-fourth and Sassafras 
Sts. 


Private corporation. 

Private organization. 

State of Pennsylvania. 

Private corporation. 

Presbyterian Hospital in 
Philadelphia. 

Presbyterian Hospital in 
Philadelphia. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

City of Erie. 

Sisters of St. Joseph. 


Class of cases treated. 

Year founded. 

Training school for 

nurses. 

Colored patients re¬ 

ceived. 

Number of beds. 

MEDICAL STAFF 
AT CLOSE OF 
YEAR. 

NURSES AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 

■4-a 

O 

H 

4-i 

0 

© 

'C 

*55 

© 

Ph 

bio 

.2 

*s5 

r—« 

c3 

4-> 

O 

Eh 

® 

a 

© 

•a 

a 

© 

General, except contagious.. 

1899 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

6 

2 

4 

30 


30 

General, except contagious.. 

1883 

Yes. 

Yes. 

127 

1 21 

3 

18 

1 23 


23 

General, except alcoholic 

1909 

Yes. 

Yes. 

24 

35 


35 

4 

1 

3 

and contagious. 











General, except chronic and 

1899 

Yes. 

Yes. 

27 

6 


6 

6 


6 

insane. 











General, except contagious.. 

1909 

Yes. 

Yes. 

24 

16 


16 

7 

1 

6 

General, except chronic. 

1902 

Yes. 

Yes. 

35 

7 


7 

9 


9 

General 

1903 

Yes. 

Yes. 

19 

28 


28 

8 


8 

General, except contagious.. 

1905 

Yes. 

Yes. 

24 

( 3 ) 


( 3 ) 

4 


4 

General, except contagious.. 

1905 

1 

Yes. 

Yes. 

16 

12 


12 

8 

1 

7 

General, except contagious.. 

1890 

No. 

Yes. 

50 

11 

1 


1 4 


4 

Tubercular. 

1905 

No. 

No. 

30 

( 3 ) 

1 

( 3 ) 

4 

2 

2 

General, except mental and 

1905 

Yes. 

Yes. 

70 

13 

3 

10 

23 


23 

tubercular. 











General, except contagious.. 

1885 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

18 


18 

32 

1 

31 

General. 

1893 

Yes. 

Yes. 

66 

32 

2 

30 

19 


19 

General, except chronic and 

1897 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

5 


5 

13 


13 

contagious. 











General. 

1904 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

16 

( 3 ) 

(•) 

(*) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

Emergency. 

1893 

Yes 

Yes. 

41 

8 


8 

12 


12 












General, except contagious 

1896 

No. 

Yes. 

8 

( 3 ) 


( 3 ) 

2 


2 

and incurable. 











General, except contagious 

1905 

Yes. 

Yes. 

58 

15 


15 

12 

2 

10 

and incurable. 











General. 

1883 

Yes 

Yes. 

100 

11 

3 

8 

22 


22 

General. 

1901 

Yes. 

Yes. 

43 

11 


11 

9 


9 

General, except contagious 

1907 

No. 

Yes. 

46 

2 

2 


9 

2 

7 

and venereal. 











General. 

1902 



30 

16 


16 

5 


5 

General. 

1895 


Yes. 

36 

1 7 



1 7 



Surgical. 

1891 

No. 

Yes. 

38 

13 


13 

7 

2 

5 

General, except contagious.. 

1894 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

4 


4 

12 


12 

Incurables, except conta- 

1893 

No. 

Yes. 

39 

5 

1 

4 

5 


5 

gious and mental. 











Convalescent. 

1892 

No. 

Yes. 

65 

5 

1 

4 

2 


2 

1 

General. 

1897 



99 

4 


4 

8 


8 

General, except chronic, con- 

1890 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

11 

2 

9 

15 


15 

tagious, and incurable. 











General. 

1881 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

28 

2 

26 

26 


26 

Contagious. 

1902 

No. 

Yes. 

16 

( 3 ) 


( 3 ) 

3 

1 

2 

General, except contagious.. 

1875 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

21 

2 

19 

39 


39 


1 Includes report of dispensary. 


2 Opened July, 1910; statistics for six months. 


3 Not reported. 




























































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


343 


SANITARIUMS: 1910—Continued. 


PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING YEAR. 


PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 


Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Adults 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

1,388 

856 

532 

69 

37 

32 

55 

14 

1,507 

869 

638 

94 

61 

33 

85 

9 

149 

65 

84 

6 

2 

4 

6 


227 

146 

81 

21 

11 

10 

19 

2 

298 

166 

132 

18 

11 

7 

18 


362 

145 

217 

19 

4 

15 

18 

1 

306 

127 

179 

15 

6 

9 

15 


263 

205 

58 

4 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

6 223 

95 

128 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

1,219 

210 

1,009 

36 

19 

17 

31 

5 

70 

30 

40 

24 

10 

14 

24 


1,104 

669 

435 

43 

24 

19 

38 

5 

1,230 

504 

726 

53 

18 

35 

43 

10 

567 

272 

295 

38 

20 

18 

29 

9 

729 

440 

289 

26 

15 

11 

23 

3 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

545 

351 

194 

30 

18 

12 

25 

5 

79 

39 

40 

2 

1 

1 

2 


324 

173 

151 

22 

11 

11 

20 

2 

1,037 

714 

323 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

464 

224 

240 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

200 

171 

29 

44 

34 

10 

39 

5 

349 

257 

92 

9 

8 

1 

9 


389 

197 

192 

11 

8 

3 

11 


403 

336 

67 

19 

17 

2 

18 

1 

375 

160 

215 

22 

8 

14 

20 

2 

35 

5 

30 

31 

5 

26 

31 


93 

19 

74 






330 

235 

95 

22 

12 

10 

22 


925 

587 

338 

55 

39 

16 

51 

4 

1,428 

884 

544 

57 

40 

17 

55 

2 

83 

39 

44 

8 

2 

6 

7 

1 

1,656 

826 

830 

70 

33 

37 

61 

9 


Total. 


*48,450 

1 43,904 
3,725 

6,361 

4,882 

6,852 

11,150 

4,324 

6,192 

i 33,137 

( 8 ) 

40,724 

31,530 


( 8 ) 


13,291 


6,503 


38,034 
1,487 
36,828 


RECEIPTS DURING 

YEAR. 


Derived from— 

Appro- 

Dona- 

Care of 

Other 

tions. 

tions. 

patients. 

sources. 

*15,000 

*17,086 

*14,772 

*1,592 

25,000 

4,160 

12,144 

2,600 


2,500 

1,225 


2,250 

757 

2,938 

416 

557 

224 

4,101 


3,000 

190 

3,662 


2,500 

2,459 

5,300 

891 

1,000 

1,221 

1,917 

186 

2,000 

231 

3,260 

701 

32,000 


1,137 



8,400 

( 8 ) 

19,692 


20,176 

856 

7,198 

1,905 

21,150 

1,277 


12,469 

13,260 

13,763 

9,964 


11,961 

15 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

11,105 

1,229 

2,743 


1,592 

456 

917 

427 

5,000 

4,800 



12,000 

2,969 

9,030 

4,438 

4,000 

36 

8,962 

5 

8,676 

13,993 


827 

7,500 

677 

1,394 

67 

4,000 

1,012 

3,218 

643 

10,045 


2,458 

150 

5,000 

1,825 

5,294 

1,172 


579 

4,295 

11,245 



1,400 

6,929 

3,200 

404 

2,899 

15,000 

1,809 

9,821 

7,597 

16,050 

1,763 

19,061 

1,160 

1,200 


287 


10,000 

370 

24,652 

1,806 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 


Total. 


*48,450 

1 41,139 
4,950 

8,508 

8,350 

6,907 

10,453 

4,352 

6,862 

i 30,000 

9,200 
39,646 

31,652 


( 8 ) 


VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 


For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

*34,895 

*13,555 

*163,662 

*163,662 


41,139 


1254,000 

221,000 

*33,000 

2,450 

2,500 

4,000 

4,000 


8,508 


15,000 

15,000 


6,250 

2,100 

33,000 

33,000 


6,907 


19,000 

19,000 


10,453 


30,000 

30,000 


4,352 


1,395 

<600 

795 

6,651 

211 

17,000 

17,000 


20,000 

10,000 

i 31,891 

31,891 


7,200 

2,000 

10,000 

10,000 


34,348 

5,298 

96,500 

95,000 

1,500 

31,652 


130,133 

130,133 


43,429 


504,000 

200,000 

304,000 

21,940 


61,000 

61,000 


( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

14,444 

4,372 

55,000 

55,000 


2,872 

136 

7,500 

7,500 


10,500 


41,359 

41,359 


26,969 


70,011 

70, 011 


12,745 

5,700 

38,000 

38,000 


5,209 

26,065 

50,000 

50,000 


9,638 


30,000 

30,000 


12,294 


i 65,000 

65,000 


12,653 


39,000 

39,000 


11,407 


34,000 

34,000 


18,211 


( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

194,190 

6,697 


( 8 ) 

(8) 


6,984 


15,000 

15,000 


32,689 

2,500 

233,882 

148,482 

85,400 

40,648 

15,380 

157,844 

130,455 

27,389 

1,443 


20,914 

20,914 


40,538 

1,318 

177,978 

177,978 



2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 
17 

13 

19 

20 
21 
22 

23 

24 

25 

26 

27 

28 

29 

30 

31 

32 

33 


« Land only. 


»Exclusive of out-patients. 


e Summer branch of Presbyterian Hospital of Philadelphia. 


































































































































344 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table IV.— HOSPITALS AND 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


Supervised or conducted by— 


Class of cases treated. 


a 

hH 


PENNSYLVANIA—Continued. 


34 

35 

36 

37 

38 

39 

40 

41 


42 

43 

44 

45 

46 

47 

48 

49 

50 

51 

52 

53 

54 

55 

56 

57 

58 

59 

60 

61 

62 

63 

64 

65 

66 

67 

68 


Fountain Springs: 

State Hospital for Injured Persons 
of the Coal Region. 

Franklin: 

Franklin Hospital. 

Prospect Park. 

Greensburg: 

Westmoreland Hospital. 

Greenville: 

Greenville Hospital. 

110 North Main St. 

Grove City: 

Grove City Hospital. 

West Main St. 

Harrisburg: 

Harrisburg Hospital. 

Front and Mulberry Sts. 

Maternity Hospital. 

226 Liberty St. 

Hazleton: 

State Hospital for Injured Persons 
of the Coal Region. 

Laurel Hill. 

Johnstown: 

Cambria Steel Co.’s Hospital 3 _ 

Lowman St. 

Conemaugh Valley Memorial Hos¬ 
pital. 

Franklin St. 

Johnstown City Hospital. 

Bloom St. 

Municipal Hospital. 

Prospect St. 

Kane: 

Kane Summit Hospital. 

Hospital Terrace. 

Kittanning: 

Kittanning General Hospital. 

Mulberry and McKean Sts. 
Lancaster: 

Lancaster General Hospital. 

530 North Lime St. 

St. Joseph's Hospital. 

College and Marietta Aves. 
Lebanon: 

Good Samaritan Hospital. 

Fourth and Walnut Sts. 
Lewistown: 

Lewistown Hospital. 

Hiland Ave. 

Lititz: 

Lititz Springs Sanitarium. 

Broad St. 

Lock Haven: 

Lock Haven Hospital. 

Susquehanna Ave. 

McKees Rocks: 

Ohio Valley General Hospital. 

McKeesport: 

McKeesport Hospital. 

Fifth Ave. 

Markleton: 

Markleton General Hospital. 

Meadvtlle: 

Meadville City Hospital. 

Liberty St. 

Spencer Hospital. 

470 Pine St. 

Mercer: 

State Hospital for Injured Persons. 
McKinley Ave. 
Monongahela: 

Monongahela Memorial Hospital... 
Poplar (New Eagle P. O.). 
Mont Alto: 

South Mountain Sanatorium. 

Morton: 

Dermady Cottage Sanatorium. 

Woodland Ave. 

Mount Pleasant: 

Mount Pleasant Memorial Hospital 
Nanticoke: 

Nanticoke Hospital. 

Cemetery. 

New Brighton: 

Beaver Valley General Hospital — 
Penn Ave. 

New Castle: 

New Castle Hospital. 

South Mercer St. 

Shenango Valley Hospital. 

Beaver St. 

Morristown: 

Charity Hospital of Montgomery 
County. 

Basin and Powell Sts. 


State of Pennsylvania. 

Private corporation... 

Private corporation... 
Private corporation... 

Private corporation... 

Private corporation... 
Private organization.. 

State of Pennsylvania. 

Cambria Steel Co. 

Private corporation... 

Private corporation... 
City of Johnstown. 

Private corporation... 

State of Pennsylvania. 

Private corporation... 
Sisters of St. Francis.. 

Private corporation... 

Private corporation... 

Private organization.. 

Private corporation... 

Private organization.. 
Private corporation... 

Private corporation... 
Private corporation... 
Private corporation... 

State of Pennsylvania. 

Private corporation... 

State of Pennsylvania. 
Private organization.. 

Private corporation... 
Private corporation... 

Private corporation... 

Sisters of St. Francis.. 
Private corporation... 

Private corporation... 


General, except contagious.. 

General, except contagious.. 

General. 

General. 

General, except contagious.. 

General, except contagious 
and obstetrical. 

Obstetrical. 

General. 

Accident. 

General. 

General. 

Contagious. 

General. 

General, except contagious.. 

General, except chronic, con¬ 
tagious, and incurable. 
General. 

General. 

General, except contagious 
and infectious. 

Nervous. 

General. 

General. 

General, except contagious.. 

General. 

General. 

General, except obstetrical.. 

General. 

General. 

Pulmonary tubercular. 

Tubercular. 

General, except contagious.. 

General, except chronic and 
contagious. 

General. 

General. 

General, except contagious.. 

General. 


1 Not reported. 


2 Includes report of dispensary. 


Year founded. 

Training school for 

nurses. 

Colored patients re¬ 

ceived. 

Number of beds. 

MEDICAL STAFF 
AT CLOSE OF 
YEAR. 

NURSES AT CLOSE 
OF TEAR. 

Total. 

Resident. 

Visiting. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

1883 

Yes. 

Yes. 

175 

4 

4 


39 

7 

32 

1901 

No. 

Yes. 

30 

12 


12 

7 


7 

1895 

Yes. 

Yes. 

74 

13 

1 

12 

15 


15 

1906 

Yes. 

Yes. 

21 

11 


11 

4 


4 

1907 

Yes. 

Yes. 

15 

10 


10 

1 


1 

1873 

Yes. 

Yes. 

104 

23 

3 

20 

23 


23 

1895 

No. 

Yes. 

4 

6 


6 

1 


1 

1889 

Yes. 

Yes. 

102 

3 

3 


17 


17 

1887 

No. 

Yes. 

46 

2 


2 

12 


12 

1889 

Yes. 

Yes. 

196 

27 


27 

30 


30 

1906 

Yes. 

Yes. 

21 

8 


8 

6 


6 

1892 

No. 

Yes. 

35 

1 


1 

1 


1 

1888 

Yes. 

Yes. 

56 

11 

1 

10 

17 


17 

1898 

No. 

Yes. 

25 

m 

3 


3 

4 


4 

1893 

Yes. 

Yes. 

125 

12 


12 

31 


31 

1883 

Yes. 

Yes. 

143 

13 


13 

21 

1 

20 

1888 

Yes. 

Yes. 

35 

12 


12 

9 


9 

1908 

Yes. 

Yes. 

37 

18 


18 

8 


8 

1904 

No. 

No. 

18 

3 

1 

2 

2 

1 

1 

1897 

Yes. 

Yes. 

60 

6 


6 

18 


18 

1907 

Yes. 

Yes. 

35 

5 

1 

4 

10 


10 

1894 

Yes. 

Yes. 

140 

18 

3 

15 

40 


40 

1907 

No. 

Yes. 

48 

2 

2 


5 


5 

1880 

Yes. 

Yes. 

60 

0) 


0) 

22 


22 

1870 

Yes. 

Yes. 

40 

12 


12 

4 


4 

1S90 

Yes. 

Yes. 

37 

9 


9 

6 


6 

1893 

No. 

Yes. 

44 

6 


6 

8 

2 

6 

1907' 

No. 

Yes. 

753 

11 

11 


32 


32 

1903 

No. 

No. 

40 

10 


10 

7 


7 

1902 

Yes. 

Yes. 

60 

2 9 

...... 

9 

2 14 


14 

190S 

No. 

Yes. 

48 

9 

1 

8 

3 


3 

1894 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

20 


20 

14 


14 

1908 

No. 

Yes. 

26 

9 


9 

13 

3 

10 

1891 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

5 


5 

20 


20 

1889 

Yes. 

Yes. 

57 

2 

2 


13 


13 


8 Employees. 















































































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


345 


SANITARIUMS: 1910—Continued. 


PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING YEAR. 

PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE 

OF YEAR. 


RECEIPTS DURING 

YEAR. 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Adults 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

Total. 

Derived from— 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

Appro¬ 

pria¬ 

tions. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
patients. 

Other 

sources. 

2,783 

2,122 

661 

168 

129 

39 

134 

34 

$98,396 

$92, 792 

$122 

$5,482 


$106,884 

$104,595 

$2,289 

$589,996 

$589,996 


34 

299 

160 

139 

14 

8 

6 

11 

3 

10,854 

5,872 


4,232 

$750 

10,854 

10,854 

50,903 

38,403 

$12,500 

35 

1,123 

748 

375 

62 

29 

33 

57 

5 

29,627 

15,000 

3 

14,624 

34,889 

29,889 

5,000 

110,000 

110,000 

36 

228 

100 

128 

10 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

6,226 

2,500 


3,726 


6,664 

6,664 

15,000 

15,000 


37 

129 

69 

60 

3 

1 

2 

3 

3,960 

1,500 

500 

1,960 


3,700 

3,700 


10,000 

10,000 


38 

1,763 

976 

787 

56 

38 

18 

49 

7 

49,319 

22,375 

9,475 

16,600 

869 

45,048 

0) 

0) 

0) 

175,000 

0) 

39 

23 


23 






888 


378 

158 

352 

833 

833 


0) 

(i) 

0) 

40 

1,143 

715 

428 

97 

56 

41 

92 

5 

2 35,000 

32,500 

2,500 



2 37,908 

35,408 

2,500 

2 176,000 

176,000 

41 

623 

623 


31 

31 


31 


2 24,828 

23,173 

1,655 


2 25,078 

24,828 

250 

2 50,000 

50,000 


42 

2,402 

1,437 

965 

98 

66 

32 

98 


46,392 

25,000 

21,392 


50,278 

50,278 


100,000 

100,000 


43 

240 

111 

129 

14 

6 

8 

14 


7,256 

4,000 


3,256 


8,109 

8,109 


25,000 

25,000 


44 

25 

7 

18 

4 

2 

2 

3 

1 

2,481 

2,300 


181 


1,013 

1,013 


* 15,000 

* 15,000 


45 

536 

252 

284 

18 

11 

7 

18 


14,147 

5,000 

1,198 

7,337 

612 

15,393 

15,393 


68,450 

68,450 


46 

198 

133 

65 

15 

10 

5 

15 


5,850 

4,000 


1,850 


7,193 

7,193 


20,000 

20,000 


47 

1,175 

540 

635 

64 

24 

40 

58 

6 

2 35,390 

12,500 

10,183 

11,484 

1,223 

2 71,472 

27,315 

44,157 

2 203,125 

176,300 

26,825 

48 

848 

430 

418 

29 

15 

14 

20 

9 

2 26,930 


11,121 

15,652 

157 

2 25,571 

25,571 


2 250,000 

250,000 


49 

280 

203 

77 

13 

11 

2 

13 


19,966 

7,500 

1,637 

1,844 

8,985 

17,129 

11,761 

5,368 

49,610 

38,610 

11,000 

50 

310 

155 

155 

21 

11 

10 

18 

3 

13,843 

8,000 

1,517 

3,705 

621 

16,205 

16,205 


60,531 

60,531 


51 

56 

40 

16 

12 

10 

2 

12 


1,501 


1,501 


4,000 

3,000 

1,000 

25,000 

20,000 

5,000 

52 

485 

271 

214 

46 

c) 

(>) 

0) 

c) 

16,151 

10,000 

258 

4,873 

1,020 

16,151 

16,151 


74,800 

55,000 

19,800 

53 

ABA 

471 

215 

30 

21 

9 

27 

3 

23,527 

10,000 

1,530 

10,767 

1,230 

21,996 

21,996 


54,000 

54,000 


54 

vOU 

2,044 

1,323 

721 

121 

54 

67 

108 

13 

102,030 

57,714 

3,469 

40,056 

791 

101,412 

70,275 

31,137 

235,841 

235,841 


55 

115 

62 

53 

17 

10 

7 

15 

2 

7,630 

5,974 


1,656 


7,548 

7,548 





56 

498 

175 

323 

23 

8 

15 

18 

5 

22,851 

6,000 

3,312 

10,224 

3,315 

47,541 

23,563 

23,978 

87,500 

76,500 

11,000 

57 

536 

336 

200 

20 

12 

8 

20 


12,683 

5,000 

55 

7,394 

234 

13,447 

13,447 


40,000 

40,000 


58 

901 

145 

56 

8 

7 

1 

8 


11,765 

10,453 


1,065 

247 

11,614 

11,614 


35,000 

35,000 


59 

457 

9 A99 

<in« 

49 

33 

31 

2 

33 


16,243 

7,500 


8,743 


16,062 

16,062 


17,500 

17,500 


6)0 

1 £95 

1 097 

740 

440 

300 

710 

30 

51 045,950 

51,045,950 



535,323 

307,263 

228,060 

0) 

0) 


61 

1 oo 

A5 


24 

14 

10 

24 

20,507 


20,507 


0) 

17,175 

0) 

9,200 

9,200 


62 

£90 

Q1 9 

916 

26 

17 

9 

26 


2 15,929 

8,000 

210 

6,945 

774 

2 20,118 

17,945 

2,173 

2 67,644 

67,644 


63 

OZo 

255 

189 

66 

15 

12 

3 

14 

1 

9,180 

5,818 

1,585 

1,777 


10,377 

10,377 

60,000 

60,000 


64 

560 

290 

270 

45 

20 

25 

36 

9 

21,105 

10,223 

1,230 

9,652 


23,085 

21,012 

2,073 

56,026 

56,026 


65 

310 

202 

108 

22 

12 

10 

21 

1 

4,721 

278 

306 

4,137 


7,442 

7,ioe 

336 

55,00C 

55,000 


66 

926 

640 

286 

40 

26 

14 

39 

1 

34,842 

12,802 

16 

19,631 

2,393 

34,844 

34,844 

. 

99,333 

99,333 


67 

700 

520 

180 

34 

20 

14 

30 

4 

2 20,882 

10,000 

2,220 

6,89C 

1,772 

2 22,000 

20,00( 

2,000 

2 100,9H 

77,433 

23,485 

68 


« Buildings and equipment. 


* Includes entire state appropriation for tuberculosis work. 














































































































































































346 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 


Table IV.— HOSPITALS AND 


u> 

£ 

a 

s 

Ft 

a 

o 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


Supervised or conducted by— 


3 


PENNSYLVANIA—Continued. 


69 

70 


71 

72 


73 

74 

75 

76 

77 

78 

79 

80 
81 

82 

83 

84 

85 

86 

87 

88 


Oil City: 

Grandview Institution. 

Plumer Road, R. D. 

Oil City Hospital. 

Bissell Ave. 

Philadelphia: 

American Hospital for Diseases of 
the Stomach. 

1809 Wallace St. 

American Oncologic Hospital. 

Thirty-third and Powelton 
Ave. 

Children’s Homeopathic Hospital 8 
Franklin and Thompson Sts. 
Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia 
207 South Twenty-second St. 
Children’s Hospital of the Mary J. 
Drexel Home. 

2100 South College Ave. 

Episcopal Hospital. 

Front St. and Lehigh Ave. 

Fabiani Italian Hospital. 

Tenth and Christian Sts. 

Frankford Hospital. 

Frankford Ave. and Wakeling 
St. 

Frederick Douglas Memorial Hos¬ 
pital. 

1530 Lombard St. 

Garretson Hospital. 

1813 Hamilton St. 

German Hospital. 

Girard and Corinthian Aves. 

Germantown Hospital. 

640 East Penn St. (German¬ 
town P. O.). 

Gynecean Hospital. 

247 North Eighteenth St. 

Hahnemann Hospital. 

235 North Fifteenth St. 

Henry Phipps Institute. 

238 Pine St. 

Home for Consumptives. 

Stenton and Evergreen Aves. 
(Chestnut Hill P. O.). 

Howard Hospital. 

801 South Broad St. 

Jefferson Medical College Hospital. 
Tenth and Sansom Sts. 


Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Episcopal Diocese of Penn¬ 
sylvania. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Hahnemann Medical Col¬ 
lege. 

University of Pennsylvania. 

Protestant Episcopal City 
Mission. 

Private corporation. 

Jefferson Medical College.... 


89 

90 

91 

92 

93 

94 

95 

96 

97 

98 

99 

100 

101 

102 

103 

104 

105 

106 
107 


Jewish Consumptive Institute of 
Philadelphia. 

406 Wharton St. 

Jewish Hospital. 

York Road and Olney Ave. 

Jewish Maternity Hospital. 

532 Spruce St. 

Kensington Hospital for Women.. 
132 Diamond St. 

Maternity Hospital. 

734 South Tenth St. 

Medico-Chirurgical Hospital. 

1725 Cherry St. 

Mercy Hospital. 

734 South Seventeenth St. 

Methodist Episcopal Hospital. 

2301 South Broad St. 

Mount Sinai Hospital. 

Fifth and Wilder Sts. 
Northwestern General Hospital... 
2019 North Twenty-second St. 

Pennsylvania Hospital. 

Eighth and Spruce Sts. 
Philadelphia Hospital for Conta¬ 
gious Diseases. 

Second and Luzerne Sts. 
Philadelphia Lying-in Charity 
Hospital. 

Eleventh and Cherry Sts. 
Philadelphia Orthopedic Hospital. 
1701 Summer St. 

Philadelphia Polyclinic Hospital.. 
1818 Lombard St. 

Presbyterian Hospital in Phila¬ 
delphia. 

51 North Thirty-ninth St. 

Preston Retreat. 

Twentieth and Hamilton Sts. 

Roosevelt Hospital. 

710 North Fifth St. 

Rush Hospital 10 . 

Lancaster Ave. and Thirty- 
third St. 


Private corporation 


J ewish Hospital Association 
of Philadelphia. 

Federation of Jewish Chari¬ 
ties. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Methodist Episcopal Church 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

City of Philadelphia. 


Private corporation 


Private corporation. 

Philadelphia Polyclinic and 
College for Graduates in 
Medicine. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation.. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 


Class of cases treated. 

Year founded. 

Training school for 

nurses. 

Colored patients re¬ 

ceived. 

Number of beds. 

MEDICAL STAFF 
AT CLOSE OF 
YEAR. 

NURSES AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 

Total. 

Resident. 

Visiting. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Tubercular. 

1904 

No. 

Yes. 

31 

1 


1 

1 


1 

General. 

1891 

Yes. 

Yes. 

51 

20 


20 

13 


13 

Gastro-intestinal. .. 

1907 

Yes. 

Yes. 

44 

39 

9 

30 

18 


18 

Cancer and other tumors.... 

1904 

No. 

Yes. 

18 

12 


12 

25 


5 

General. 

1877 

Yes. 

Yes. 

174 

41 

3 

38 

25 


25 

General. 

1S56 

Yes. 

Yes. 

75 

14 

2 

12 

30 


30 

General. 

1888 

No. 

Yes. 

50 

20 

1 

19 

8 


8 

General. 

1851 

Yes. 

Yes. 

424 

50 

13 

37 

2 93 


93 

General. 

1904 

No. 

No. 

28 

6 

i 

5 

4 

1 

3 

General. 

1903 

Yes. 

Yes. 

54 

2 22 

3 

19 

2 19 


19 

General. 

1895 

Yes. 

Yes. 

65 

31 

2 

29 

12 


12 

General. 

1897 

Yes. 

Yes. 

27 

14 

2 

12 

11 


11 

General, except contagious.. 

1860 

Yes. 

Yes. 

220 

48 

9 

39 

56 

14 

42 

General. 

1870 

Yes. 

Yes. 

150 

8 45 

5 

40 

2 39 


39 

Gynecological. 

1888 

Yes. 

Yes. 

45 

10 


10 

19 


19 

General, except chronic and 

1867 

Yes. 

Yes. 

300 

67 

6 

61 

268 


68 

contagious. 











Tubercular. 

1903 

Yes. 

Yes. 

24 

13 


13 

11 


11 

Tubercular. 

1876 

Yes. 

Yes. 

78 

9 

1 

8 

14 


14 

General. 

1853 

Yes. 

Y es. 

80 

15 

3 

12 

18 


18 

General, except alcoholic. 

1876 

Yes. 

Yes. 

300 

32 

14 

18 

122 

13 

109 

contagious, incurable, and 











insane. 











Tubercular. 

1909 

No. 

Yes. 


25 


25 




General, except contagious 

1865 

Yes. 

Yes. 

140 

78 

7 

71 

55 


55 

and infectious. 











Obstetrical. 

1873 

No. 

No. 

23 

32 

1 

31 

10 


10 

General. 

1884 

Yes. 

Yes 

44 

6 

1 

5 

2 18 


18 

Obstetrical. 

1872 

Yes. 

Yes. 

22 

5 

1 

4 

4 


4 

General, except contagious.. 

1882 

Yes. 

Yes. 

204 

2 56 

8 

48 

2 70 


70 

General, except chronic and 

1907 

Yes. 

Yes. 8 

20 

27 

2 

25 

9 


9 

contagious. 











General. 

1892 

Yes. 

Yes. 

150 

37 

7 

30 

45 


45 

General, except contagious.. 

1905 

Yes. 

Yes. 

55 

17 

4 

13 

15 


15 

General. 

1907 

Yes. 

Yes 

23 

13 

1 

12 

10 


10 

General. 

1751 

Yes. 

Yes. 

315 

24 

14 

10 

75 


75 

Contagious. 

1865 

No. 

Yes. 

500 

12 

10 

2 

32 


32 

Maternity and gynecological. 

1828 

Yes. 

Yes. 

60 

5 

2 

3 

24 


24 

Nervous and deformed. 

1867 

Yes. 

Yes. 

126 

9 

2 

7 

2 27 

1 

26 

General, except contagious 

1882 

Yes. 

Yes. 

108 

37 

6 

31 

35 


35 

and insane. 











General. 

1871 

Yes. 

Yes. 

230 

39 

10 

29 

56 


56 

Obstetrical. 

1836 

No. 

No. 

50 

7 

1 

6 

11 


11 

General. 

1894 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

19 

2 

17 

8 


Q 

Tubercular. 

1890 

No. 

Yes. 

75 

2 4 


4 

27 


7 












1 Not reported. 

2 Includes report of dispensary. 

8 Includes Maternity Department opened in 1908. 


4 Included in report of Mary J. Drexel Home. 
6 Exclusive of out-patients. 

«Report for four month s. 






























































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


347 


SANITARIUMS: 1910—Continued. 


PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING YEAR. 

PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 


RECEIPTS DURING 

YEAR. 


Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Adults 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

Total. 

Derived from— 

Appro¬ 

pria¬ 

tions. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
patients. 

Other 

sources. 

67 

31 

36 

19 

5 

14 

19 


$11,375 

$3,500 

$2,606 

$5,136 

$133 

407 

214 

193 

20 

12 

8 

20 


15,185 

6,385 

55 

7,661 

1,084 

570 

252 

318 

12 

( l ) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

2 34,525 

5,777 

7,708 

20,114 

926 

133 

59 

74 

16 

8 

8 

16 


2 18,598 

10,000 

3,707 

4,340 

551 

1,768 

935 

833 

66 

25 

41 

11 

55 

2 42,065 

20,375 

12,273 

3,747 

5,670 

1,590 

1,040 

550 

56 

25 

31 


56 

2 55,348 

375 

3,854 

840 

50,279 

915 

552 

363 

34 

12 

22 


34 

( l ) 



8,482 

A) 

3,699 

2,278 

1,421 

242 

( l ) 

0) 

225 

17 

2 148,191 


14,714 

10,587 

122,890 

197 

187 

10 

18 

16 

2 

18 


(i) 



2 6,386 

(i) 

920 

454 

466 

44 

24 

20 

36 

8 

2 35,073 

17,205 

6,117 

9,194 

2,557 

6 314 

114 

200 

22 

10 

12 

21 

1 

12,787 

10,000 

350 

2,432 

5 

424 

193 

231 

11 

7 

4 

11 


2 17,592 

10,375 

637 

6,509 

71 

3,394 

1,824 

1,570 

144 

68 

76 

144 


2 133,194 

10,750 

431 

56,920 

65,093 

1,966 

1,055 

911 

81 

0) 

(>) 

73 

8 

2 61,732 

375 

14,582 

25,435 

21,340 

713 


713 

26 


26 

26 


2 21,333 

14,375 


6,936 

22 

3,066 

1,408 

1,658 

124 

59 

65 

111 

13 

2 211,875 

100,375 

43,974 

49,513 

18,013 

173 

105 

68 

24 

12 

12 

24 


t'- 

00 

i-H 

4 

ei 


43,187 



(1) 

(!) 

(i) 

78 

20 

58 

71 

7 

33,310 


3,750 


29,560 

858 

296 

562 

36 

14 

22 

32 

4 

2 35,642 

6,000 

2,216 

21,266 

6,160 

5,425 

C 1 ) 

0) 

239 

0) 

0) 

(') 

0) 

224,732 

95,375 

4,022 

103,996 

21,339 

* 241 

120 

121 






5,000 


4,000 

1,000 


2,221 

1,295 

926 

69 

38 

31 

62 

7 

7 101,846 

20,750 

5,960 

24,420 

50,716 

342 


342 

27 

4 

23 

15 

12 

10,788 


242 

946 

9,600 

437 


437 

38 


38 

38 


2 25,213 

10,361 

5,838 

7,694 

1,320 

95 


95 

14 


14 

14 


8,174 

3,500 

1,015 

490 

3,169 

19,069 

13,890 

5,179 

112 

68 

44 

103 

9 

2 156,243 

87,500 

3,109 

43,850 

21,784 

369 

121 

248 

16 

5 

11 

16 


12,597 

5,000 

969 

2,350 

4,278 

1,908 

954 

954 

88 

44 

44 

68 

20 

2 91,237 


29,198 

25,045 

36,994 

770 

405 

365 

47 

24 

23 

38 

9 

2 74,701 

15,375 

27,426 

837 

31,063 

525 

355 

170 

18 

6 

12 

16 

2 

2 9,534 


1,210 

6,283 

2,041 

4,334 

2,742 

1,592 

263 

164 

99 

(*) 

( l ) 

(>) 

(') 

(*> 

0) 

0) 

q 779 

1,819 

1 953 

270 

133 

137 

13 

257 

198,724 

197,652 


1,072 


6 458 

458 

25 

25 

25 

2 22,479 

9,000 

2,424 

3,536 

7,519 

660 

301 

359 


(0 

( l ) 

(0 

( l ) 

2 74,030 

15,000 

4,666 

39,231 

15,133 

1,653 

797 

856 

74 

39 

35 

54 

20 

2 66,233 

27,875 

8,793 

13,488 

16,077 

» 2,089 

976 

1,113 

143 

65 

78 

118 

25 

2 118,127 

750 

13,743 

44,013 

59,621 

323 


323 

38 

8 

30 

23 

15 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

613 

368 

245 

26 

0) 

( l ) 

( l ) 

( l ) 

10,298 

2,743 

3,854 

2,660 

1,041 

364 

207 

157 

25 

11 

14 

23 

2 

2 38,051 

12,500 

9,046 

8,365 

8,140 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

$10,224 

$10,224 


$13,500 

$12,500 

$1,000 

69 

16,647 

16,647 


98,276 

73,276 

25,000 

70 

2 25,935 

25,935 


2 45,000 

45,000 


71 

2 18,302 

18,302 


2 33,591 

33,591 


72 

2 30,477 

16,827 

$13,650 

2 245,549 

241,990 

3,559 

73 

2 43,645 

43,645 


2 1,175,000 

350,000 

825,000 

74 

(') 

<*) 

« 

(*) 

<«) 

<9 

75 

2 190,444 

178,451 

11,993 

2 3,099,293 

651,920 

2,447,373 

76 

(!) 

2 8,748 

(l) 




77 

2 35,850 

33,454 

2,396 

2 157,018 

128,166 

28,852 

78 

15,644 

15,644 


100,000 

100,000 


79 

1 

2 17,705 

17,705 


2 200,000 

200,000 


80 

2 134,921 

134,921 


2 2,550,000 

1,300,000 

1,250,000 

81 

2 76,568 

75,154 

1,414 

2 745,250 


745,250 

82 

2 21,333 

21,333 


2 100,000 

100,000 


83 

2 71 741 

12,268 

59,473 

2 1,546,850 

1,500,000 

46,850 

84 

2 43,187 

43,187 





85 

36,313 

32,558 

3,755 

900,000 

300,000 

600,000 

86 

2 44,087 

35,391 

8,696 

2 214,167 

140,000 

74,167 

87 

228,387 

227,418 

969 

1,850,000 

1,500,000 

350,000 

88 

5,000 

5,000 


7,700 

7,700 


89 

7 146,960 

143,175 

3,785 

7 1,035,156 

750,000 

285,156 

90 

10,251 

9,276 

975 

15,500 

12,000 

3,500 

91 

2 24,895 

21,705 

3,190 

2 188,000 

160,000 

28,000 

92 

7,804 

6,708 

1,096 

111,538 

40,432 

71,106 

93 

2 146,375 

141,368 

5,007 

2 1,559,976 

1,425,000 

134,976 

94 

12,348 

12,348 


10,500 

10,500 


95 

2 72,031 

72,031 


2 754,803 

477,500 

277,303 

96 

2 75,258 

45,290 

29,968 

2 139,833 

139,833 


97 

2 11,971 

11,971 


2 14,500 

14,500 


98 

179,710 

172,697 

7,013 

( l ) 

(*) 

( l ) 

99 

192,893 

181,404 

11,489 

1,562,721 

1,562,721 


100 

2 21,152 

21,152 


2 91,000 

55,000 

36,000 

101 

2 82,657 

82,657 


2 588,000 

265,000 

323,000 

102 

2 74,368 

70,395 

3,973 

2 446,044 

338,177 

107,867 

103 

2 128,609 

121,931 

6,678 

2 1,687,066 

762,879 

924,187 

104 

0) 

( l ) 

( l ) 

( l ) 

(0 

<9 

105 

11,272 

11,272 


0) 

(1) 


106 

2 29,754 

28,964 

790 

2 315,094 

262,000 

53,094 

107 


7 Includes reports of Home for Aged and Infirm Israelites, and Lucien Moss Home for Incurables of Jewish Faith, Philadelpoia. 
s Chiefly colored. 

» Exclusive of 307 children, sex not given. 

■o Includes report of city hospital and country branch. 




























































































































348 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table IV.— HOSPITALS AND 


■O 

S 

s 

a 

d 

o 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


PENNSYLVANIA—Continued. 


108 

109 

110 
111 
112 
113 

111 

115 

116 

117 

118 

119 

120 

121 

122 

123 

124 

125 

126 

127 

128 

129 

130 

131 

132 

133 

134 

135 

136 

137 

138 

139 

140 

141 

142 

143 

144 

145 


Philadelphia— Continued. 

St. Agnes Hospital. 

1900 South Broad St. 

St. Christopher’s Hospital for 
Children. 

Laurence and Huntingdon Sts. 

St. Joseph’s Hospital. 

Girard Ave. and Sixteenth St. 
St. Luke’s Homeopathic Hospital. 
4414 North Broad St. 

St. Mary’s Hospital. 

1725 Frankford Ave. 

St. Timothy’s Memorial Hospital.. 
Ridge Ave. and Jamestown 
St. (Manayunk P. O.). 

Samaritan Hospital. 

Broad and Ontario Sts. 

Stetson Hospital. 

Fourth St., above Columbia 
Ave. 

U. S. Naval Hospital. 

Twenty-fourth St. and Gray’s 
Ferry Road. 

University of Pennsylvania Hos¬ 
pital. 

3400 Spruce St. 

West Philadelphia Hospital for 
Women. 

4035 Parrish St. 

Wills Eye Hospital. 

1810 Race St. 

Women’s Homeopathic Hospital. 
Twentieth St. and Susque¬ 
hanna Ave. 

Women’s Medical College Hospital. 
Twenty-first St. and North 
College Ave. 

Women’s Medical College Mater¬ 
nity. 

335 Washington Ave. 

Women’s Southern Homeopathic 
Hospital. 

724 Spruce St. 

Philipsburg: 

Cottage State Hospital. 

Phoenix ville: 

Phoenixville Hospital. 

Nutts Ave. 

Pittsburgh: 

Allegheny General Hospital. 

100 East Stockton Ave. (North 
Side). 

Children’s Hospital. 

Forbes St. and McDevitt Place. 
Elizabeth Steel Magee Hospital 1 .. 
Forbes and Halket Sts. 

Eye and Ear Hospital. 

1945 Fifth Ave. 

General and Emergency Hospital.. 
402 Collins Ave. 

Homeopathic Medical and Surgical 
Hospital. 

Centre and Akin Aves. 

Mercy Hospital. 

Pride and Locust Sts. 

Montefiore Hospital. 

3000 Centre Ave. 

Passavant Hospital. 

Roberts and Reed Sts. 

Pittsburgh Hospital. 

Frankstown Ave. and Beech- 
wood Boulevard. 

Pittsburgh Municipal Hospital.... 
Bedford Ave. 

Presbyterian Hospital. 

Sherman and Montgomery 
Aves. 

St. Francis Hospital. 

Forty-fifth St. 

St. John’s General Hospital. 

300 McClure Ave. (North Side). 

St. Joseph’s Hospital. 

2117 Carson St. 

St. Margaret Memorial Hospital_ 

265 Forty-sixth St. 

South Side Hospital. 

South Twentieth and Mary Sts. 

Tuberculosis League Hospital. 

Bedford Ave. and Wandless St. 

U. S. Marine Hospital. 

Fortieth St. and Penn Ave. 
Western Pennsylvania Hospital... 
Brcreton Ave. 


Supervised or conducted by— 


Sisters of Third Order of St. 
Francis. 

Private corporation. 

Sisters of Charity. 

Private corporation. 

Sisters of Third Order of St. 

Francis of Assisi. 

Private corporation. 

Temple University. 

Private corporation. 

U. S. Government. 

University of Pennsylvania. 


Private corporation. 

I 

Board of Directors of City 
Trusts. 

Women’s Homeopathic As¬ 
sociation of Pennsylvania. 

Women’s Medical College of 
Pennsylvania. 

Women’s Medical College of 
Pennsylvania. 

Private corporation. 


State of Pennsylvania. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation.. 

Private corporation.. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Sisters of Mercy. 

Private corporation. 

Institution of Protestant 
Deaconesses (Lutheran). 
Sisters of Charity. 

City of Pittsburgh. 

Private corporation. 

Sisters of St. Francis... 

Private corporation. 

Sisters of St. Joseph. 

Private corporation (Epis¬ 
copal). 

Private corporation. 

Tuberculosis League. 

U. S. Government.. 

Private corporation. 


Class of cases treated. 

Year founded. 

Training school for 

nurses. 

Colored patients re¬ 

ceived. 

Number of beds. 

MEDICAL STAFF 
AT CLOSE OF 
YEAR. 

NURSES AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 

Total. 

Resident. 

Visiting. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

General, except contagious.. 

1888 

Yes. 

Yes. 

314 

6 


6 

81 

6 

75 

General. 

1875 

Yes. 

Yes. 

55 

27 

2 

25 

1 17 


17 

General. 

1849 

Yes. 

Yes. 

175 

24 

8 

16 

1 68 

7 

61 

General. 

1896 

Yes. 

Yes. 

55 

1 41 

1 

40 

i 21 


21 

General. 

1866 

Yes. 

Yes. 

145 

38 

4 

34 

35 


35 

General. 

1890 

Yes. 

Yes. 

75 

22 

4 

18 

21 


21 

General, except chronic and 

1891 

Yes. 

Yes. 

151 

i 58 

6 

52 

i 54 


54 

contagious. 











General. 

18S7 

Yes. 

Yes. 

55 

35 

3 

32 

16 


16 

General. 

31910 

No. 

Yes. 

151 

5 

5 


18 

18 


General.. 

1874 

Yes. 

Yes. 

391 

14 

3 

11 

127 


127 

General.. 

1889 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

11 

3 

8 

20 


20 

Eye. 

1832 

No. 

Yes. 

100 

22 

2 

20 

8 


8 

General.. 

1S82 

Yes. 

Yes. 

125 

i 29 

2 

27 

18 

18 


General. 

1904 

Yes. 

Yes. 

53 

47 

< 5 

<42 

< 15 


15 

Obstetrical. 

1903 

No. 

Yes. 

( 6 ) 

0 s ) 

(«) 

(«) 

(«) 


(«) 

General. 

1896 

Yes. 

Yes. 

39 

35 

2 

33 

10 


10 

Accident. 

1891 

No. 

Yes. 

28 

2 

2 


4 


4 

General. 

1893 

Yes. 

Yes. 

75 

9 

1 

8 

14 


14 

General. 

1882 

Yes. 

( 2 ) 

350 

35 

10 

25 

98 


98 

General, except contagious.. 

1887 

Yes. 

Yes. 

60 

i 17 

1 

16 

1 14 


14 

Obstetrical and gynecolog- 

1911 

Yes. 

Yes. 

74 

5 

5 





ical. 











Eve and ear. 

1895 

No. 

Yes. 

42 

9 

1 

8 

10 


10 

General. 

1907 

Yes. 

Yes. 

35 

28 

14 

14 

6 


6 

General. 

1866 

Yes. 

Yes. 

150 

4 

4 

( 2 ) 

50 


50 

General, including hydro- 

1848 

Yes. 

Yes. 

360 

15 

15 

( 2 ) 

95 

15 

80 

phobic. 











General. 

1908 

Yes. 

Yes. 

62 

17 

3 

14 

24 

2 

22 

General, except contagious.. 

1849 

Yes. 

Yes. 

80 

24 

3 

21 

35 

2 

33 

General, except contagious.. 

1896 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

15 

3 

12 

i 43 


43 

General, except contagious.. 

1905 

No. 

Yes. 

150 

5 

1 

4 

11 

1 

10 

General. 

1895 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

27 

4 

23 

35 


35 

General. 

1865 

Yes. 

Yes. 

710 

36 

11 

25 

i 74 

14 

60 

General. 

1896 

Yes. 

Yes. 

150 

5 

3 

2 

22 

2 

20 

General. 

1904 

Yes. 

Yes. 

70 

14 

2 

12 

18 

1 

17 

General. 

1891 

Yes. 

Yes. 

80 

11 

2 

9 

16 


16 

General. 

1889 

Yes. 

Yes. 

250 

28 

4 

24 

25 


25 

Tubercular. 

1907 

No. 

No. 

80 

12 

3 

9 

8 

2 

6 

General. 

1910 

No. 

Yes. 

55 

2 

2 


2 

2 


General. 

1848 

Yes. 

Yes. 

300 

43 

13 

30 

80 


80 













1 Includes report of dispensary. < Includes report of Women’s Medical College Maternity, 335 Washington Avenue, and 

2 Not reported. Amy S. Barton Dispensary, 1207 South Third Street, Philadelphia. 

• Reconstructed. 6 Includes report of Women’s Medical College Maternity. 
















































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


349 


SANITARIUMS: 1910—Continued. 


RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 

PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Total. 

Derived from— 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

Appro¬ 

pria¬ 

tions. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
patients. 

Other 

sources. 

$83,605 

$19,125 

$3,668 

$24,879 

$35,993 

$64,06) 

$54,061 

$10,000 

$555,000 

$555,000 


108 

1 19,331 

7,187 

5,615 

1,741 

4,788 

i 19,398 

19,398 


i 164,764 

40,000 

$124,764 

109 

i 100,783 

20,750 

4,033 

59,076 

16,924 

i 100,713 

100,713 


( s ) 

i 250,000 

( s ) 

110 

130,011 

10,375 

2,882 

10,226 

6,528 

131,541 

30,001 

1,540 

1 180,000 

175,000 

5,000 

111 

42,855 

9,750 

23,070 

9,221 

814 

40,669 

33, 715 

6,954 

(*) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

112 

i 33,757 

15,375 

5,841 

5,553 

6,988 

i 29,792 

27,218 

2,574 

1 257,847 

198,647 

59,200 

113 

i 73,745 

25,375 

2,272 

42,202 

3,896 

i 77,226 

77,226 


i 270,000 

270,000 


114 

35,547 

2,427 

12,443 

11,848 

8,829 

34,906 

34,906 


16,436 

16,436 

115 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

249,813 

49,813 

200,000 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

116 

i 249,939 

75,000 

10,082 

94,308 

70,549 

i 235,700 

235,700 

i 2,455,540 

1,078,322 

1,377,218 

117 

25,419 

7,176 

3,252 

11,330 

3,661 

25,038 

23,797 

1,241 

131,002 

58,909 

72,093 

118 

74,673 

48,384 

21,289 


5,000 

74,660 

36,276 

38,384 

645,100 

200,000 

445,100 

119 

i 27,501 

12,875 

1,372 

4,273 

8,981 

128,319 

28,319 


1 290,000 

225,000 

65,000 

120 

<38,787 

25,000 

1,178 

7,899 

4,710 

<49,311 

30,997 

18,314 

< 156,652 

130,817 

25,835 

121 

(«) 

(«) 

w 

w 

(»> 

m 

(*) 

(•) 

(«) 

(*> 

(»> 

122 

i 13,480 

5,375 

2,521 

4,580 

1,004 

i 16,653 

16,653 


155,500 

54,500 

1,000 

123 

i 29,850 

29,850 




i 29,850 

19,500 

10,350 

i 40,000 

40,000 


124 

i 22,017 

7,500 

1,386 

4,425 

8,706 

i 22,075 

21,075 

1,000 

i 90,000 

80,000 

10,000 

125 

184,080 

87,764 

3,576 

85,490 

7,250 

195,389 

195,389 


1,020,000 

950,000 

70,000 

126 

i 23,248 

10,000 

6,759 


6,489 

i 37,841 

24,223 

13,618 

i 154,250 

33,600 

120,650 

127 









3,283,461 

248,000 

3,035,461 

128 

38,141 

15,000 

3,416 

18,380 

1,345 

39,191 

39,191 


130,279 

130,279 


129 

7,200 

1,000 

2,700 

3,500 

8,900 

8,900 


8 3,500 

8 3,500 


130 

i 111,586 

43,750 

10,487 

42,010 

15,339 

i 111,586 

102,156 

9,430 

i 1,256,516 

990,113 

266,403 

131 

161,930 

55,000 


104,662 

2,268 

164,247 

164,247 


1,000,000 

1,000,000 


132 

41,477 

12,256 

19,376 

9,845 

38,042 

37,518 

524 

140,000 

140,000 


133 

46,287 

2,500 

1,790 

40,639 

1,358 

47,446 

47,446 


238,000 

225,000 

13,000 

134 

i 40,270 



30,167 

10,103 

1 46,213 

46,213 


i 500,000 

500,000 


135 

60,463 

59,663 


800 

45,233 

45,233 


145,000 

145,000 


136 

i 107,562 

61,693 

11,554 

26,109 

8,206 

i 109,559 

61,337 

48,222 

i 403,253 

390,511 

12,742 

137 

i 86,181 

30,000 


55,124 

1,057 

i 293,486 

99,769 

193,717 

i 2,200,000 

2,200,000 


138 

i 42,828 

19,386 

710 

22,732 

i 40,454 

36,261 

4,193 

i 256,000 

246,000 

10,000 

139 

28,077 

• 25,000 


2,988 

89 

142,424 

15,999 

126,425 

150,000 

150,000 


140 

52,701 

2,085 

2,638 

47,978 

54,637 

49,155 

5,482 

1,263,133 

445,418 

817,715 

141 

i 114,935 

65,000 

767 

43,806 

5,362 

i 114,939 

89,225 

25,714 

i 435,000 

425,000 

10,000 

142 


7,69S 

17,933 

14,668 

5,258 

i 41,364 

41,364 


i 23,748 

23,748 


143 

14 175 

14,175 

14,175 

( 2 ) 

( j ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


144 

151,084 

62,500 


73,614 

14,970 

151,467 

151,467 

756,000 

500,000 

256,000 

145 


PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING YEAR. 


PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 


Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Adults 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

3,078 

2,135 

943 

263 

161 

102 

246 

17 

862 

534 

328 

36 

23 

13 


36 

2,916 

1,560 

1,356 

130 

55 

75 

124 

6 

846 

240 

606 

65 

30 

35 

58 

7 

1,929 

( j ) 

< 2 ) 

73 

( 2 > 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

852 

483 

369 

34 

21 

13 

33 

1 

2,714 

1,157 

1,557 

115 

46 

69 

94 

21 

980 

445 

535 

33 

15 

18 

33 


421 

421 


70 

70 


70 


4,947 

2,547 

2,400 

264 

140 

124 

264 


726 


726 

34 


34 

34 


17,588 

(») 

( 2 ) 

69 

51 

18 

69 


1,218 

406 

812 

38 

15 

23 

33 

5 

6 849 

277 

572 

544 

6 

38 

6 35 

69 

8 285 

(«) 

( 6 ) 

(«) 


(«) 

( 6 ) 


425 

61 

364 

26 

6 

20 

17 

9 

219 

158 

61 

12 

8 

4 

11 

1 

424 

234 

190 

16 

8 

8 

12 

4 

8,915 

( i > 

( j ) 

236 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

386 

216 

170 

50 

26 

24 


50 

1,560 

1,040 

520 

30 

18 

12 

23 

7 

3,700 

1,500 

2,200 

22 

9 

13 

22 


2,425 

1,055 

1,370 

122 

56 

66 

106 

16 

6,266 

4,333 

1,933 

302 

183 

119 

286 

16 

988 

393 

595 

44 

14 

30 

32 

12 

1,479 

742 

737 

121 

59 

62 

113 

8 

1,387 

723 

664 

81 

36 

45 

79 

2 

578 

343 

235 

66 

41 

25 

31 

35 

1,151 

477 

674 

74 

32 

42 

64 

10 

3,139 

1,558 

1,581 

293 

145 

148 

290 

3 

1,246 

720 

526 

43 

34 

9 

43 


9 386 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

24 

14 

10 

24 


511 

282 

229 

f*24 

13 

11 

, 23 

1 

2,137 

1,464 

673 

104 

70 

34 

100 

4 

221 

100 

121 

79 

36 

43 

66 

13 





C 




9 113 

113 


3 

3 


3 


3,338 

1,967 

1,371 

251 

178 

73 

241 

10 


6 Included in report of Women’s Medical College Hospital. 
* Not opened until January, 1911. 


8 Equipment. 

9 Exclusive of out-patients. 































































































































350 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table IV.—HOSPITALS AND 







*2 

1 

© 


MEDICAL STAFF 

NURSES AT CLOSE 









AT CLOSE 

Ur 

OF 

YEAR. 






O 

oa 


YEAR. 



d 

a 

NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of cases treated. 

© 

'O 

O . 

,d co 
88 

5 

Id 

d ® 

© 

rQ 







_o 

■3 

3 

►H 




§ 

a 

bL d 

© 

© 

b 

JO 

1-4 

© 

& 

a 

13 

d 

© 

2 

*w 

to 

.a 

*05 

13 

© 

© 

13 

a 




£ 


O 

z 



i> 

H 

a 



PENNSYLVANIA—Continued. 














Pittston: 










1 8 



146 

Pittston Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

Emergency. 

1892 

Yes. 

Yes. 

45 

13 

1 

12 


8 

Main St. * 









Pottstown: 










1 12 



147 

Pottstown Hospital. . 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1893 

Yes. 

Yes. 

40 

1 10 


10 


12 

North Charlotte St. 







Pottsville: 













148 

Pottsville Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General... . 

1895 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

15 

4 

11 

' 28 


28 

Punxsutawney: * 







149 

150 

Adrian Hospital. 

Private association.. 

General. 

1888 

Yes. 

Yes. 

72 

16 

1 

15 

18 


18 

Punxsutawney Hospital. 

Private corporation... . 

General. 

1902 

Yes. * 

Yes. 

34 

25 

15 

10 

10 


10 

115 Gilpin St. 







Reading: 













151 

Berks County Tuberculosis Sana¬ 
torium. 

Berks County Tuberculosis 
Society. 

Tubercular. 

1910 

No. 

Yes. 

20 

1 

1 


3 


3 









Neversink Mountain. 












152 

Homeopathic Medical and Surgical 
Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1SS7 

Yes. 

Yes. 

75 

12 

2 

10 

14 


14 








135 North Sixth St. 













153 

Reading Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1867 

Yes. 

Yes. 

65 

27 

2 

25 

21 


21 

Front and Spring Sts. 






154 

St. Joseph’s Hospital. 

Sisters of Third Order of St.. 

General, except contagious.. 

1873 

Yes. 

Yes. 

135 

14 

3 

11 

27 


27 

1215* Walnut'St. 

Francis. 




Renovo: 













155 

Renovo Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1909 

Yes. 

Yes. 

21 

7 


7 

6 

1 

5 

Ninth and Huron Ave. 







Ridgway: 













156 

Elk County General Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1901 

Yes. 

Yes. 

40 

9 

7 

2 

17 


17 

Euclid'A ve. and Hospital St. 








Roaring Spring: 













157 

Nason Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1896 

Yes. 

Yes. 

40 

12 

1 

11 

7 


7 

Rochester: 







158 

Rochester General Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious .. 

1899 

Yes. 

Yes. 

36 

12 


12 

8 


8 

500 Pinney St. 





Sayre: 













159 

Robert Packer Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1885 

Yes. 

Yes. 

80 

1 3 

3 


' 23 

1 

22 

South Wilbur Ave. 





Scranton: 













160 

Hahnemann Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1897 

Yes. 

Yes. 

75 

'll 

1 

10 

1 22 


22 

316 Colfax Ave. 



161 

Moses Taylor Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1884 

Yes. 

Yes. 

95 

152 

8 

3 

5 

25 


25 

162 

State Hospital for Injured Persons 
of the Coal Region. 

State of Pennsylvania. 

General. 

1901 

Yes. 

Yes. 

21 

5 

16 

41 


41 






410 Franklin Ave. 













163 

West Mountain Sanatorium. 

Scranton Society for the Pre¬ 
vention and Cure of Con- 

Pulmonary tubercular . 

1903 

No. 

Yes. 

24 

12 


12 

1 


1 







sumption. 












164 

West Side Hospital . 

Private corporation . 

General. 

1895 

Yes. 

Yes. 

42 

8 


8 

14 


14 

Jackson St." and Bromley Ave. 






Sewickley: 













165 

Sewickley Valley Hospital . 

Privato corporation. 

General, except alcoholic 
and contagious. 

1907 

No. 

Yes. 

40 

20 


20 

8 


8 

Sharon: 














166 

Christian H. Buhl Hospital. 

Private corporation . 

General, except contagious 
and tubercular. 

1893 

Yes. 

Yes. 

60 

6 


6 

9 


9 

494 East State St. 





South Bethlehem: 













167 

St. Luke’s Hospital . 

Private corporation . 

General . 

1872 

Yes. 

Yes. 

86 

» 8 

4 

4 

»22 


22 

Sunbury: 






168 

Mary M. Packer Hospital . 

Private corporation . 

General . 

1895 

No. 

Yes. 

30 

12 


12 

5 


5 

Susquehanna: 







169 

Simon H. Barnes Memorial Hospi¬ 
tal. 

Willow Ave. 

Private corporation . 

General, except contagious.. 

1904 

Yes. 

Yes. 

16 

19 

11 

8 

4 


4 






Taylor: 













170 

Taylor Hospital . 

Private corporation . 

Genoral . 

1903 

Yes. 

Yes. 

33 

24 


24 

9 


9 

” Rendham P. O. 






Titusville: 













171 

City Hospital . 

Private corporation . 

General . 

1900 

Yes. 

Yes. 

25 

9 


9 

6 


6 

" Oak St. 







Uniontown: 













172 

Uniontown Hospital . 

Private corporation . 

General, except contagious. . 

1903 

Yes. 

Yes. 

84 

11 

1 

10 

24 


24 

Berkley St. * 




Upland: 


General, except chronic and 











173 

J. Lewis CrozerHomeopathicHos- 

Trustees of J. Lewis Crozer 

1897 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

10 

1 

9 

14 


14 


pital. 

Endowment. 

contagious. 











Chester P. O. 














Warren: 













174 

Warren Emergency Hospital . 

Private corporation . 

General, except alcoholic, 
insane, smallpox, and tu- 

1S97 

Yes. 

Yes. 

65 

30 


30 

16 

> 


16 

The Crescent. 





Washington: 


bercular. 











175 

Washington Hospital . 

Private corporation . 

General, except contagious .. 

1897 

Yes. 

Yes. 

65 

15 


15 

17 


17 

34 Acheson A’ve. 






West Chester: 













176 

Chester County Hospital . 

Private corporation . 

General, except alcoholic, 
contagious, infectious, and 

1892 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

4 

2 

2 

25 


25 










venereal. 












White Haven: 













177 

Fern Cliff Sanatorium . 

Private organization . 

Incipient tubercular . 

1904 

No. 

No. 

No. 

Yes. 

20 

55 

202 

5 


5 

2 

1 

1 

178 

Sunnvrest Sanatorium . 

Private organization . 

Curable tubercular . 

1901 

No 

7 

1 

4 

0 

5 

179 

White Haven Sanatorium . 

Private corporation . 

Tubercular . 

1901 

Yes. 

16 

12 

17 

. 17 


i Includes report of dispensary. 2 Not reported. 
































































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


351 


SANITARIUMS: 1910—Continued. 


PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING YEAR. 

PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 

RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 

PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Adults 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

Total. 

Derived from— 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

Appro¬ 

pria¬ 

tions. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
patients. 

Other 

sources. 

448 

352 

96 

22 

20 

2 

22 


1 $13,906 

$10,200 

$575 

$3,101 

$30 

1 $15,241 

$11,241 

$4,000 

i $54,000 

$54,000 


146 

395 

254 

141 

22 

12 

10 

19 

3 

i 13,511 

7,500 

1,398 

3,964 

649 

i 14,289 

14,289 

i 96,319 

65,013 

$31,306 

147 

1,667 

1,055 

612 

97 

63 

34 

90 

7 

1 48,310 

22,500 

5,925 

6,000 

13,885 

i 46,487 

44,176 

2,311 

» 248,470 

170,000 

78,470 

148 

800 

487 

313 

53 

39 

14 

53 


22,441 

11,500 

4,702 

6,239 


25,350 

25,350 


85,000 

85,000 


149 

1,808 

537 

1,271 

25 

7 

18 

25 


11,078 

'250 

10,828 


18'743 

18; 743 


50,000 

50.000 


150 

45 

30 

15 

20 

13 

7 

20 


17,250 


17,095 

155 


15,295 

8,156 

7,139 

15,000 

15,000 


151 

639 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

37 

22 

15 

28 

9 

14,764 

7,442 


7,322 

16,387 

16,387 

75,000 

75,000 


152 

1,139 

610 

529 

59 

33 

26 

53 

6 

1 23,933 

9,616 

2,448 

8,737 

3,132 

i 23,939 

23,939 


i 103,633 

91,483 

12,150 

153 

1,253 

698 

555 

73 

35 

38 

65 

8 

i 36,663 

10,000 

16,668 

9,995 


1 37,966 

36,726 

1,240 

i 260,000 

260,000 


154 

137 

77 

60 

7 

6 

1 

7 


4,481 

750 

2,381 

1,350 

4,510 

4,510 



155 

495 

249 

246 

23 

12 

11 

22 

1 

18,857 

9,000 

82 

9,687 

88 

19,146 

19,146 


65,800 

65,800 


156 

304 

144 

160 

15 

7 

8 

15 


9,350 

5,500 

456 

3,140 

254 

29,616 

9,616 

20,000 

45,000 

45,000 

. 

157 

481 

354 

127 

21 

13 

8 

20 

1 

14,637 

7,449 

79 

7,033 

76 

14,637 

14,342 

295 

41,300 

41,300 


158 

1,046 

553 

493 

30 

10 

20 

28 

2 

i 26,947 

12,800 

1,505 

10,021 

2,621 

i 27,525 

26,407 

1,118 

i 155,000 

150,000 

5,000 

159 

864 

349 

515 

33 

17 

16 

25 

8 

i 33,084 

13,750 

4,019 

9,703 

5,612 

i 35,251 

33,807 

1,444 

i 150,000 

150,000 


160 

970 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

54 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

161 

2,123 

1,310 

813 

104 

67 

37 

87 

17 

61,419 

56,298 


5,052 

69 

61,419 

61,419 


350,000 

350.000 


162 

28 

18 

10 

22 

12 

10 

22 


11,779 

2,500 

9,024 

140 

115 

10,505 

10,505 


20,000 

20,000 


163 

751 

415 

336 

38 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

24,032 

7,750 

11,950 

3,140 

1,192 

29,687 

17,737 

11,950 

80,000 

80,000 


164 

365 

156 

209 

16 

8 

8 

11 

5 

19,298 

4,500 

2,810 

10,368 

1,620 

24,332 

20,824 

3,508 

110,252 

101,427 

8,825 

165 

649 

345 

304 

21 

9 

12 

18 

3 

23,700 

9,993 

34 

13,673 


23,319 

23,319 


56,144 

56,144 


166 

1,507 

930 

577 

58 

32 

26 

48 

10 

151,070 

9,375 

4,089 

18,080 

19,526 

150,367 

50,367 


i 394,558 

270,000 

124,558 167 

278 

129 

149 

15 


8 

15 


13,299 

8,734 

1,757 

2,708 

100 

10,824 

10,824 


52,000 

50,000 

2.000 168 

113 

82 

31 


2 

3 

4 

1 

4,752 

2 500 

181 

2,071 


4,973 

4,631 

.I 

342 

14,925 

14,925 


169 

286 

171 

115 

21 

14 

7 

21 


10,940 

7,500 

389 

448 

2,603 

11,063 

11,063 

v i 

45.000 

45,000 


170 

229 

119 

110 

s 

7 

1 

8 


11,449 

5,085 

576 

4,593 

1,195 

10,696 

10,696 


32,000 

32,000 


171 

Q1Q 

6Q3 

226 

53 

47 

6 

50 

3 

35,353 

20,000 


15,353 


36,254 

35,273 

981 

115,687, 

115,687 


172 

558 

322 

236 

11 

9 

i 2 

11 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

173 

561 

280 

281 

21 

12 

9 

16 

5 

24,462 

6,000 

6,142 

8,044 

4,276 

25,635 

21,730 

3,905 

173,000 

108,000 

65,000 

174 

630 

300 

330 

25 

10 

15 

22 

3 

i 21,362 

5,914 

959 

13,850 

639 

i 21,362 

21,362 


i 67,500 

67,500 


175 

1,257 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

64 

27 

37 

43 

21 

26,800 

i 

8,000 

1,709 

9,588 

7,503 

31,434 

31,434 


177,888 

90,000 

87,88> 

176 

in 

40 


12 

12 


12 


7,488 



7, 4S8 


6,980 

6,980 





177 

128 

76 

52 

43 

25 

18 

43 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

c 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

40,oor 

( 2 ) 

178 

700 

400* 

3001 

156 

103 

53 

150 

6 

100, 731 


12,247 

62,507 

25,977 

109,487 

63,138 

46,349 

250,000 

250,000 


179 


3 Included in report of J. Lewis Crozer Home for Incurables. 























































































































































352 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table IV.—HOSPITALS AND 


iso 

181 

182 

183 

184 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 

9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 
17 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 


1 

2 

3 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


PENNSYLVANIA—Continued. 

Wilkes-Barre: 

Mercy Hospital.. 

196 Hanover St. 

Wilkes-Barre City Hospital_ 

North River St. 
Wilkinsburg: 

Columbia Hospital. 


Williamsport: 

Williamsport Hospital. 

Campbell and Louisa Sts. 

York: 

York Hospital. 

RHODE ISLAND. 

East Greenwich: 

Crawford Allen Memorial Hospital 3 

Fort Greble: 

U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

Dutch Island. 

Hillsgrove: 

St. Joseph’s Hospital (Annex)_ 

Newport: 

Newport Hospital. 

15 Friendship St. 

U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

Fort Adams. 

U. S. Naval Hospital. 

U. S. Naval Training Station. 
Pawtucket: 

Memorial Hospital. 

Prospect St. 

Park Place Hospital. 

Park Place. 

Providence: 

Chestnut Street Hospital. 

147 Chestnut St. 

Homeopathic Hospital. 

62 Jackson St. 

Providence City Hospital 7 . 

Eaton St. 

Providence Lying-in Hospital. 

96 State St. 

Red Cross Day Camp 8. 

Eaton St. 

Rhode Island Hospital. 

593 Eddy St. 

St. Joseph’s Hospital. 

Broad and Peace Sts. 

Wallum Lake- 

State Sanatorium. 

Woonsocket: 

Woonsocket Hospital. 

115 Cass Ave. 

SOUTH CAROLINA. 

Aiken: 

Aiken Sanatorium 12 . 

Charleston: 

Roper Hospital. 

Lucas St. 

St. Francis Xavier Infirmary. 

260 Calhoun St. 

Columbia: 

Columbia Hospital. 

2019 Hampton St. 

S. C. Confederate Infirmary. 

Bull St., extended. 

Taylor Lane Hospital. 

2410 Taylor St. 
Moultrieville': 

U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

Fort Moultrie. 

Port Royal: 

U. S. Naval Hospital. 

Spartanburg: 

Good Samaritan Hospital. 

328 Forest St. 

SOUTH DAKOTA. 

Aberdeen: 

St. Luke’s Hospital. 

Cheyenne Agency: 

Cheyenne Agency Hospital. 

Dead wood: 

St. Joseph’s Hospital. 

61 Charles St. 


Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of cases treated. 

Year founded. 

Training school for 

nurses. 

Colored patients re¬ 

ceived. 

Number of beds. 

MEDICAL STAFF 
AT CLOSE OF 
YEAR. 

NURSES AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 

C3 

O 

EH 

0 

© 

3 

*CG 

© 

PH 

bi) 

a 

4-9 

*53 

£ 

3 

4-> 

O 

H 

3 

a 

© 

I 

© 

fa 

Sisters of Mercy. 

General, except contagious.. 

1898 

Yes. 

Yes. 

125 

i 16 

2 

14 

1 36' 

i 

35 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious 

1872 

Yes. 

Yes. 

125 

23 

3 

20 

i 33 

4 

29 


and venereal. 











United Presbvterian Worn- 

General. 

1889 

Yes. 

Yes. 

150 

14 

3 

11 

44 

3 

41 

en’s Association of North 












America. 












P rival a coroorat.ion.. 


1873 

Yes. 

Yes. 

162 

15 

3 

12 

33 


33 


and tubercular. 











Private corporation 

General.. 

1880 

Yes. 

Yes. 

70 

28 

5 

23 

20 


20 

"Rhrtdfl Island Hospital 


1907 

No. 

Yes. 

42 

8 


8 

7 


7 


bones and joints a specialty. 











U. S. Government.. 

General.. 

1904 

(5) 

Yes. 

15 

1 

1 


5 

8 5 


Sisters of St. Francis.. 

Tubercular... 

1904 

(2) 

Yes. 

60 

1 

1 


5 


5 

Private corporation.... 

General. 

1873 

Yes. 

Yes. 

125 

20 


20 

33 


33 

U. S. Government.. . 

General.... 

(2) 

(5) 

Yes. 

30 

2 

2 


18 

8 18 


U. S. Government._ 

General. 

1897 

No. 

Yes. 

100 

3 

3 


21 

21 


Private corporation. 

General. 

1901 

Yes. 

Yes. 

45 

1 

1 


15 

1 

14 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious. 

1899 

( 1 2 3 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


incurable, and insane. 











Private corporation. 

General. 

1901 

No. 

Yes. 

12 

i 2 

2 


i 2 

2 


Private corporation... 

General. 

1904 

Yes. 

Yes. 

25 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

7 16 


16 

City of Providence. 

Contagious. 

1910 

No. 

Yes. 

150 

19 

3 

16 

28 

3 

25 

Private corporation.... 

Obstetrical. 

1884 

Yes. 

Yes. 

45 

5 

1 

4 

16 

* 

16 

Providence City Hospital. 

Tubercular. 

1907 

No. 

Yes. 


3 


3 

1 


1 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious 

1862 

Yes. 

Yes. 

400 

64 

22 

42 

183 

20 

163 


and maternity. 











Sisters of St. Francis.. . 

G eneral. 

1892 

Yes. 

Yes. 

120 

61 

6 

55 

31 

4 

27 

State of Rhode Island.. 

Tubercular. 

1905 

Yes. 

Yes. 

130 

2 

2 


6 


6 

Private corporation .... 

G eneral. 

1873 

Yes. 

No. 

36 

9 

1 

8 

i 12 


12 

Private corporation. 

Incipient tubercular. 

1897 

No. 

No. 

16 

2 

1 

1 

1 


1 

Medical Society of South 

General. 

1845 

Yes. 

Yes. 

218 

19 

9 

10 

35 


35 

Carolina. 












Sisters of Mercy_ 

General. 

1882 

Yes. 

(2) 

60 

( 2 ) 

1 

( 2 ) 

18 

4 

14 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious 

1892 

Yes. 

No. 

50 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

25 


25 


and venereal. 









State of South Carolina... 

General. 

1908 

(2) 

No. 

10 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

3 

3 


Private corporation. 

General. 

1901 

Yes. 

( 13 ) 

25 

12 

2 

10 

18 

9 

9 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

(2) 

(5) 

Yes. 

24 

2 

2 


15 

8 15 


U. S. Government._ 

General.... 

1898 

No. 

Yes. 

20 

i 

1 


3 

3 


Private corporation. 

General. 

1907 

Yes. 

Yes. 

22 

9 


9 

10 


10 

Presentation Nuns . , , 

General, except insane. 

1900 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

29 

1 

28 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1895 

No. 

Yes. 

20 

3 

1 

2 

1 


1 

Benedictine Sisters. 

General, except contagious.. 

1898 

Yes. 

Yes. 

45 

12 


12 

25 

1 

24 


1 Includes report of dispensary. 8 Instruction for Hospital Corps. 

2 Not reported. 6 Enlisted men, Hospital Corps. 

3 Children only. 7 Opened 1910; statistics for 7 months. 

* Included in report of Rhode Island Hospital, Providence. 8 Opened from May to October. 




















































































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


353 


SANITARIUMS: 1910—Continued. 


PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING YEAR. 

PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE 

OF YEAR. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Adults 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

1,591 

840 

751 

60 

37 

23 

48 

12 

1,964 

1,117 

847 

100 

52 

48 

83 

17 

1,343 

561 

782 

59 

36 

23 

53 

6 

1,753 

915 

838 

124 

59 

65 

101 

23 

862 

420 

442 

46 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

75 

( s ) 

( s ) 

37 

( 2 > 

( 2 > 


37 

216 

216 


1 

1 


1 


159 

89 

70 

49 

28 

21 

49 


945 

440 

505 

55 

31 

24 

40 

15 

449 

449 


8 

8 


8 


1,083 

1,083 


103 

103 


103 


449 

264 

185 

24 

10 

14 

24 


( s ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

c 2 ) 

4 250 

2,500 

1,750 

2 

2 


2 


452 

136 

316 

13 

5 

8 

13 


619 

307 

312 

97 

54 

43 

39 

58 

578 


578 

34 


34 

34 


89 

89 







6,042 

3,359 

2,683 

258 

159 

99 

209 

49 

1,679 

735 

944 

88 

50 

38 

70 

18 

409 

228 

181 

118 

66 

52 

( s ) 

c 2 ) 

230 

137 

93 

22 

10 

12 

20 

2 

17 

17 


15 

15 


15 

...... 

1,782 

1,09? 

683 

62 

38 

24 

62 


510 

16C 

350 

43 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

23 

20 

800 

35C 

450 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 > 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

600 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

c 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

318 

31* 


16 

ie 


16 


77 

77 


5 

5 


5 


332 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

1,187 

( 2 ) 

c 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

175 

82 

93 

10 

5 

5 

3 

7 

633 

32C 

313 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 


Total. 


i 70,144 
69,151 


( 4 ) 

( 2 ) 

7,7 

60,1 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

25,7 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

9 Exclusive of food furnished by Providence City Hospital. 

Includes report of dispensary and of Crawford Allen Memorial Hospital, East Greenwich. 
11 Includes miscellaneous expenses. 


RECEIPTS DURING 

YEAR. 


PAYMENTS DURING 

YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

2 


Derived from— 




For 


Land, 


§ 






For 

perma- 


build- 

In- 

a 

o 





Total. 

running 

nent 

Total. 

mgs, 

vested 

•H 

Appro- 

Dona- 

Care of 

Other 


ex- 

im- 


and 

funds. 

— 

pria- 

tions. 

tions. 

patients. 

sources. 


penses. 

prove- 

ments. 


equip¬ 

ment. 


1 












$18,653 

$4,456 

$19,434 

$9,871 

i $52,414 

$52,414 


i $180,000 

$180,000 


180 

22,057 

25,033 

20,895 

2,159 

i 58,475 

57,595 

$880 

1 255,662 

206,361 

$49,301 

181 

15,000 

3,611 

50,540 


73,585 

73,585 


350,000 

350,000 


182 

27,500 

13,400 

1,570 

43,766 

43,766 


250,000 

245,000 

5,000 

183 

10,3(|) 

545 

6,279 

2,402 

i 20,075 

20,075 


i 78,395 

65,000 

13,395 

184 

( 4 ) 

(<) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

( 4 ) 

1 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


2 

5,000 

293 

1,631 

846 

11,218 

7,818 

3,400 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

3 

. 

6,668 

19,445 

34,066 

95,927 

38,442 

57,485 

430,705 

220,950 

209,755 

4 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 



C 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


5 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


V / 

33 854 

33,454 

400 

70,000 

70,000 


6 

1,509 

9,020 

8,964 

6,228 

31,053 

28,303 

2,750 

299,000 

200,000 

99,000 

7 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

c 2 ) 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

8 

J .. 


5,000 

5,000 

l 8,000 

6,000 

2,000 

i 3,500 

3,500 


9 


2 238 

13,063 

495 

1 15,920 

15,920 

i 36,000 

25,000 

11,000 

10 

32,393 


1,328 


33,721 

33,721 


390,000 

390,000 


11 

5 8,250 

3,903 

8,852 

900 

23,053 

18,695 

4,358 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

12 

3 

9 473 



473 

473 





13 

3 35,000 

19,820 

66,608 

81,855 

io 203,283 

201,960 

1,323 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

101,008,448 

14 

2 10,250 

19,991 

15,744 

5,397 

55,845 

40,845 

15,000 

(*) 

( 2 ) 

1,000 

15 

3 56,527 


4 967 

1,739 

77,888 

62,164 

15,724 

200,000 

200,000 


16 

6 600 

300 

6,052 

38,174 

1 43,624 

15,703 

ii 27,921 

i 250,000 

120,000 

130,000 

17 

4 . 

735 

1,827 

3,482 

5,759 

5,685 

74 

60,035 

8,000 

52,035 

1 

5 28,800 


22 695 


54,427 

52,733 

1,694 

160,000 

160,000 


2 

c 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

3 

0 


25,000 


25,000 

25,000 


75,000 

75,000 


4 

0 14,000 


. 

14,000 

14,000 

. 

15,000 

15,000 


5 

8 6 V 

200 

4 00C 

5,000 

9 000 

9,000 





6 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


7 

( 2 ) 


(t) 


( 2 ) 

9,292 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


8 

0 183 

634 

3,447 

136 

4,379 

4,182 

197 

14 2,000 

14 2,000 

. 

9 

o 


34,500 


34,000 

34,000 

. 

50,000 

50,000 

. 

1 

0 (*) 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 

. 

( 2 ) 

2,000 

2,000 

. 

3,000 

3,000 

. 

2 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( j ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


3 


12 Open from October to May. 

1 3 Colored only, 
n Equipment. 


44153 °— 14 - 


-23 
















































































































































































Institution number. 


354 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table IV.— HOSPITALS AND 


4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 


a;- 





© 


MEDICAL STAFF 
AT CLOSE OF 

NURSES AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 








YEAK. 


















NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of cases treated. 

'd 

© 

o . 

co 
o © 

CO CO 

g 

I'd 

eJ ® 

© 

rO 

S-< 










B 

o 

60 S 

O 

© 

(-4 

© 

rO 


pi 

d 

© 

fcb 

.a 



© 




i-i 

c3 

‘1 

o_ 

a 

| 

*w 

*w 

c« 

© 

a 





f-H 

H 

o 

O 

sc 

H 


> 

§ 

8 


SOUTH DAKOTA—Continued. 













Fort Meade: 






40 




11 

2 ii 


U. S. Army Post Hospital . 

U. S. Government . 

General. 

1878 

0) 

Yes. 

4 

2 

2 


Hot Springs:' 



75 

12 


12 

15 


14 

Our Lady of Lourdes Hospital.... 
Lead: 

Homestake Hospital. 

Benedictine Sisters. 

General. 

1900 

Yes. 

Yes. 


i 

Homestake Mining Co. 

General. 

1879 

No. 

No. 

20 

4 5 

1 

4 

4 5 


5 

214 West Main St. 












Pierre: 









6 

11 


10 

St. Mary’s Hospital. 

Sisters of St. Benedict. 

General, except contagious.. 

1897 

No. 

Yes. 

40 

6 


i 

Dakota Ave. 










Sioux Falls: 







( 3 ) 


( 3 ) 

15 



Sioux Falls Hospital 

Synod for Norwegian Lu¬ 
theran Church. 

General, except contagious 
and insane. 

1894 

Yes. 

Yes. 

35 



15 

Nineteenth * and Minnesota 






Ave. 













Yankton: 










10 



Sacred Heart Hospital 

Benedictine Sisters.. 

General. 

1893 

Yes. 

Yes. 

30 

6 


6 


10 

Fourth St., west. 








TENNESSEE. 













Chattanooga: 










24 



Baroness Erlanger Hospital . 

County of Hamilton and 
city of Chattanooga. 

General, except chronic and 
contagious. 

1891 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

16 


16 


24 

221 Harrison Ave. 

( 3 ) 




O’Rear Smallpox Hospital. 

County of Hamilton and 
city of Chattanooga. 

Smallpox. 

1902 

No. 

Yes. 

40 

1 

( 3 ) 

1 


1 

Frances. 





Jackson: 












Civic League Hospital 5 . 

Civic League. 

General, except contagious 
and infectious. 

1910 

Yes. 

Yes. 6 

14 

6 

6 


4 


4 

Baltimore and Royal Sts. 








Knoxville: 













Knoxville General Hospital. 

City of Knoxville. 

General, except chronic and 
contagious. 

1899 

Yes. 

Yes. 

80 

27 

2 

25 

20 


20 

901 Cleveland Place' 






Lincoln Memorial Hospital. 

Lincoln Memorial Univer- 

General.. 

(*) 

Yes. 

No. 

51 

14 

2 

12 

30 


30 

Dameron Ave. 

sity. 






Memphis: 












Emergency Hospital. 

County of Shelby. 

Smallpox. 

1870 

No. 

Yes. 

100 

1 

1 


4 

3 

1 

Hindman Ferry Road. 









Lucy Brinkley Hospital 7 . 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1891 

Yes. 

No. 

25 

14 


14 

14 


14 

855 Union Ave.' 






Memphis Tuberculosis Hospital... 
Riverside Boulevard. 

City of Memphis. 

Tubercular. 

1908 

No. 

Yes. 

25 

2 


2 

2 

1 

1 






( 3 ) 


St. Joseph’s Hospital. 

Sisters of St. Francis. 

General. 

1889 

No. 

No. 

200 

24 

4 

20 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

Jackson Ave. 





U. S. Marine Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

18S2 

No. 

Yes. 

40 

2 

1 

1 

2 

2 


California St. 








Nashville: 













Mercy Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1890 

Yes. 

( 9 ) 

45 

16 

14 

2 

12 


12 

811 Fourth Ave., south. 





Nashville City Hospital. 

City of Nashville. 

General, except contagious.. 

1889 

Yes. 

Yes. 

110 

11 

6 

6 

16 


16 

Nance St. 





St. Thomas Hospital. 

Sisters of Charity of St. 
Vincent de Paul. 

Surgical. 

1898 

Yes. 

( 3 ) 

85 

20 


20 

36 

4 

32 

Hayes and Twentieth Sts. 




Wilson Infirmarv. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1907 

( 3 ) 

( 9 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

(*) 

( 3 ) 

First Ave., south and South 



nm st. 













Woman’s Hospital 7 . 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1903 

Yes. 

No. 

40 

7 

1 

6 

18 


18 

301 Eighth Ave., north. 





Vanderbilt University Hospital 12 .. 
Fifth Ave., south and Elm St. 

Vanderbilt University. 

General. 

1907 

Yes. 

Yes. 

75 

28 

3 

25 

10 


10 





TEXAS. 













Amarillo: 













St. Anthony’s Sanitarium. 

Sisters of Charity of the 
Incarnate Word. 

General, except contagious.. 

1900 

No. 

Yes. 

75 




12 

1 

11 

701 North Polk St. 




Austin: 













Austin Sanitarium. 

Private organization.. 

General. 

1900 

Yes. 

Yes. 

75 

4 

1 

3 

21 

1 

20 

1401 Congress Ave. 






City Hospital. 

City of Austin. 

General. 

1850 

No. 

Yes. 

40 

2 

1 

1 

4 

1 

3 

1400 Sabine St. 








Seton Infirmary. 

Sisters of Charity. 

G eneral. 

1900 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

25 

15 

10 

23 

12 

H 

Twenty-sixth St. 



Beaumont: 













Hotel Dieu. 

Sisters of Charity of the 
Incarnate Word. 

General, except smallpox 
and yellow fever. 

1897 

Yes. 

Yes. 

150 

25 

1 

24 

25 

x 

24 

Sabine Pass Ave. 



Brackett ville: 












U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1857 

0) 

Yes. 

30 

2 

2 


7 

2 7 


Fort Clark. 







Dallas: 













City Emergency Hospital. 

Citv of Dallas. 

Emergency. 

1909 

No. 

Yes. 


4 

4 


2 

2 


Main and Lamar Sts. 










Parkland Hospital. 

Citv of Dallas. 

General, except contagious.. 

1894 

Yes. 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

3 

3 


4 

1 

3 

Oakland and Maple Sts. 







St. Paul’s Sanitarium. 

Sisters of Charity. 

General, except chronic and 
contagious. 

1896 

Yes. 

Yes. 

145 

( 3 > 


( 3 ) 

4 44 

3 

41 

Bryan St. 




Texas Baptist Memorial Sanita- 

Missionary Baptist Church.. 

General, except incurable 

1909 

Yes. 

No. 

150 

30 


30 

40 


40 

rium. 


and infectious. 











3315 Junius St. 













El Paso: 













Providence Hospital. 

. Private corporation. 

General. 

1902 

Yes. 

Yes. 

64 

50 

50 


19 

1 

18 

Upson Ave.'and Santa Fe St. 





St. Mark’s Hospital 7 . 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1907 

No. 

No. 

13 

20 


20 

3 


3 

1001 Nevada St. 






Fort Bliss: 













U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

( 3 ) 

0) 

Yes. 

25 

2 

2 


2 

22 


Fort Sam Houston: 








U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1908 

0) 

Yes. 

164 

17 

17 


6 


6 


1 Instruction for Hospital Corps. 

2 Enlisted men, Hospital Corps. 

3 Not reported. 


4 Includes report of dispensary. 

6 Opened June 15,1910; statistics for about 7 months. 

6 Railroad emergency cases only. 











































































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


355 


SANITARIUMS: 1910—Continued. 


PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING YEAR. 

PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Adults 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 






633 

223 

410 

28 

16 

12 

28 


243 

189 

54 

7 

6 

1 

6 

1 

550 

224 

326 

26 

12 

14 

21 

5 

434 

228 

206 

22 

13 

9 

20 

2 

261 

119 

142 

19 


19 

18 

1 

1,427 

874 

553 

57 

33 

24 

52 

5 

106 

69 

37 

6 

2 

4 

3 

3 

60 

44 

16 

5 

3 

2 

5 


954 

531 

423 

33 

15 

18 

30 

3 

757 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

38 

6 

32 

36 

2 

435 

295 

140 

9 

9 


9 


416 


416 

33 


33 

33 


81 

50 

31 

16 

7 

9 

15 

i 

3,402 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

145 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

< 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

8 523 

523 


19 

19 


19 


387 

103 

284 

23 

9 

14 

21 

2 

2,137 

1,069 

1,068 

86 

43 

43 

79 

7 

1,517 

690 

827 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

565 

148 

417 

30 

6 

24 

29 

1 

800 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

m 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

576 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

12 

7 

5 

12 


800 

200 

600 

20 

5 

15 

20 


339 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

25 

19 

6 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

774 

326 

448 

25 

10 

15 

24 

1 

996 

646 

350 

77 

35 

42 

77 


21 fi 

216 


9 

9 


9 


1 400 

1 900 

200 






815 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

58 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

2,410 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

78 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

2,147 

( 3 ) 

( 3 > 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

612 

324 

288 

18 

12 

6 

18 


85 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

10 

3 

7 

6 

4 

**97 

324 

3 

43 

43 


43 


2,270 

2,270 


184 

1.84 


184 



7 Women and children. 

8 Exclusive of out-patients. 
8 Colored only. 


Total. 


( 3 ) 

$ 21,100 

< 30, GOO 

6,925 

13,939 

9,337 


38,156 
2,360 

3,225 

18,934 
40,000' 


18,993 j 
5,200 
(*) 

17,263 

3,646 

40,000 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

27,451 

( 3 ) 

18,988 

15,000 
10,296 
17,578 

12,398 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

62,890 


23,927 

4,942 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 


Derived from— 


Appro¬ 

pria¬ 

tions. 


( 3 ) 


$420 


20,000 

2,360 

2,000 

6,000 


( 3 ) 


5,000 

17,263 


io 33,467 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


io 9,2% 
947 

2,848 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


Dona¬ 

tions. 


$100 


155 

306 

2,193 


500 

1,170 

10,000 


93 

200 


( 3 ) 


443 


( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


100 


( 3 ) 


Care of 
patients. 


( 3 ) 
$24,000 
30,384 

6,200 

13,633 

7,144 

17,525 


725 

11,764 

30,000 


18,900 


( 3 ) 


2,372 
ii 6,533 
, ( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

27,451 


18,988 

15,000 
ii 1,000 
16,631 

9,450 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

23,927 

4,942 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


Other 

sources. 


$216 

150 


631 


< 3 ) 


831 


( 3 ) 

0 


( 3 ) 


( 3 ) 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


4 

$22,000 

$18,000 

$4,000 

$00,000 

$G0,000 


5 

<38,892 

38,264 

628 

<30,000 

30,000 


6 

6,925 

4,925 

2,000 

40,000 

40,000 


7 

13,939 

10,778 

3,161 

4,835 

4,835 


8 

9,121 

8,516 

605 

35,000 

35,000 


9 

34,209 

32,071 

2,138 

110,000 

90,000 

$20,000 

1 

2,360 

2,360 


4,000 

4,000 


2 

1,000 

1,000 


20,000 

20,000 


3 

18,298 

16,003 

2,295 

92,000 

92,000 


4 

40,000 

28,000 

12,000 

55,000 

55,000 


5 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


(3) 

( 3 ) 


6 

( 3 ) 

15,577 

( 3 ) 

60,000 

60,000 


7 

5,000 

5,000 


3,500 

3,500 


8 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


9 

17,263 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

50,000 

50,000 


10 

3,741 

3,741 





11 

40,000 

32,155 

7,845 

75,000 

75,000 


12 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

13 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

14 

28,215 

24,215 

4,000 

60,000 

60,000 


15 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 




16 

17,994 

17,994 


30,000 

30,000 


1 

15,000 

12,000 

3,000 

50,000 

50,000 


2 

9,557 

8,036 

1,521 

25,000 

25,000 


3 

19,398 

12,398 

7,000 

85,000 

85,000 


4 

9,219 

8,219 

1,000 

83,057 

83,057 


5 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


6 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

1,200 

1,200 

• 

7 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


8 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

<250,000 

250,000 


9 

77,451 

77,451 


450,000 

450,000 


10 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

3,902 


11 

4,703 

4,703 

18,000 

18,000 


12 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


13 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


14 


ic Exclusive of amount covered into city treasury. 

11 Covered into city treasury. 

12 Open during school term; statistics for about 9 months. 



















































































































































































356 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table IV.— HOSPITALS AND 


NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of cases treated. 

Year founded. 

Training school for 

nurses. 

Colored patients re¬ 

ceived. 

Number of beds. 

MEDICAL STAFF 
AT CLOSE OF 
YEAR. 

NURSES AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 

-4-3 

o 

■4-i 

0 

© 

2 

’w 

© 

fcJb 

.9 

■H 

> 

13 

-*■» 

o 

EH 

© 

a 

© 

15 

9 

© 

TEXAS—Continued. 













Fort Worth: 













Medical College Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1906 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

5 

5 


9 

i 

8 

Fifth and”Calhoun Sts. 












St. Joseph’s Infirmary. 

Sisters of Charity of the In- 

General. 

1881 

Yes. 

Yes. 

300 

66 

2 

64 

64 

4 

60 

South Main St. 

camate Word." 












Galveston: 













John Sealy Hospital. 

City of Galveston. 

General. 

1884 

Yes. 

Yes. 

150 

12 

4 

8 

32 


32 

827 Strand St. 













St. Mary’s Infirmary. 

Sisters of Charity of the In- 

General, except insane. 

1866 

Yes. 

( s ) 

175 

15 

3 

12 

36 

1 

35 

Eighth and Market Sts. 

camate Word. 














1911 










Fort Crockett. 













Houston: 













Baptist Sanitarium and Hospital 



1907 

Yes. 

No. 

21 

18 


18 

12 


12 

* 602 Lamar Ave. 













Houston Infirmary. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1872 

Yes. 

Yes. 

125 

10 

3 

7 

14 

2 

12 

1008 Washington St. 













St. Joseph’s Infirmary. 

Sisters of Charity of the In- 

General. 

1886 

Yes. 

Yes. 

150 

52 

12 

40 

25 

2 

23 

1910* Crawford St." 

camate Word. 












Laredo: 













U. S Army Post Hospital. 


General. 

( 2 ) 

( 6 ) 

Yes. 

18 

2 

2 


8 

68 


Fort McIntosh. 











Llano: 













Llano Sanitarium. 

Private individual 

Tubercular. 

1898 

No. 

No. 

15 

8 

3 

5 

3 


3 

Texas Sanitarium for Tuberculosis. 

Private organization. 

Tubercular. 

1903 

No. 

No. 

50 

2 

1 

1 

2 

1 

1 

Marshall: 













Texas & Pacific Ry. Hospital 7 .. 

Texas & Pacific Railway Co. 

General. 

1886 

No. 

Yes. 

75 

13 

3 


12 

3 

9 

R. R. Ave. 












Palestine: 













International & Great Northern 

International & Great 

General. 

1886 

No. 

Yes. 

75 

7 

3 

4 

10 

6 

4 

R. R. Hospital. 7 

Northern R. R. Co. 












Magnolia St. 













Paris: 













W. B. Aikin Hospital. 

City of Paris and County of 

General. 

1892 

(*)' 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

South Sixteenth St. 

Lamar. 









San Angelo: 













Sunny Crest Bungalows. 

Private organization... 

Tubercular. 

1908 

No. 

No. 

20 

3 

2 

1 

1 


1 

San Antonio: 













City Hospital. 

City of San Antonio... 

General, except tubercular.. 

1886 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

7 

1 

6 

6 


6 

"515 Morales St. 












San Antonio Tent Colony. 

Private individual.. 

Lung and throat. 

1905 

No. 

No. 

40 

1 

1 


2 

1 

1 

701 Zarzamora St. 













Santa Rosa Infirmary. 

Sisters of Charity of the In- 

General, except contagious.. 

1869 

Yes. 

Yes. 

200 

22 

2 

20 

56 

6 

50 

705 West Houston St. 

camate Word. 












Sherman: 













St. Vincent’s Sanitarium. 

Sisters of Charity. 

General. 

1902 

Yes. 

( 2 ) 

78 

15 


15 

19 

3 

16 

Temple: 












Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Ry. 

Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe 

General, except contagious.. 

1891 

No. 

Yes. 

120 

5 

1 

4 

16 

3 

13 

Hospital. 7 

Ry. Co. 












Twenty-fifth St. 













Terrell: 













Texas, Midland R. R. Hospital 7 .. 

Texas Midland R. R. Co_ 

General. 

1893 

No. 

No. 

12 

4 

2 

2 

2 

1 

1 

604 South Rockwall Ave. 













Texarkana: 













Texarkana Sanitarium and Hos- 

Private eorporation. 

General. 

1900 

Yes. 

Yes. 

28 

9 


9 

8 


8 

pital. 













517 Pine St. 













Waco: 













Providence Sanitarium. 

Sisters of Charity. 

General. 

1905 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

19 

1 

18 

Vermont and Eighteenth Sts. 










UTAH. 









• 




Provo City: 













Provo General Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1903 

Yes. 

No. 

20 

3 


3 

6 


6 

192 South First*St., east. 












Salt Lake City: 













City Isolation Hospital. 

Salt Lake City.:. 

Smallpox. 

1903 

No. 

Yes. 

35 

3 


3 

1 


1 

" Twenty-third * St., east and 













Tenth St.,south. 













Dr. W. H. Groves Latter-Day 

Latter-Day Saints. 

General. 

1903 

Yes. 

Yes. 

105 

22 

2 

20 

52 


52 

Saints Hospital. 













Eighth and C. Sts. 













Holy Cross Hospital. 

Sisters of the Holy Cross. 

General, except contagious 

1874 

Yes. 

Yes. 

150 

8 

1 

7 

36 


36 

East First South St. 


or infectious! 











St. Mark’s Hospital. 

Protestant Episcopal Church 

General. 

1879 

Yes. 

Yes. 

130 

42 

2 

40 

44 


44 

Second St..*west and Seventh 












. St., nortn. 













U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1862 

( 5 ) 

Yes. 

48 

3 

3 


18 

6 18 


Fort Douglas. 












W interquarters : 













Utah Fuel Co. Hospital 7 . 

Utah Fuel Co. 

General. 

1900 

No. 

No. 

12 

2 

1 

1 

2 

1 

1 

VERMONT. 













Barre: 













Barre City Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except infectious 

1907 

Yes. 

Yes. 

15 

10 


10 

6 


6 

63 Washington St. 


and tubercular. 











Brattleboro: 













Brattleboro Memorial Hospital.... 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1904 

Yes. 

Yes. 

32 

9 


9 

24 


24 

Canal St. 




✓ 









Burlington: 



, 










Mary Fletcher Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except chronic. 

1876 

Yes. 

Yes. 

125 

18 

6 

12 

48 

3 

45 

Colchester Aver 













© 

B 

0 

0 

O 

D 

a 


15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 
21 
22 

23 


24 

25 

26 


27 

28 

29 

30 

31 

32 

33 

34 

35 

36 

37 


1 Includes report of dispensary. 

2 Not reported. 


3 Exclusive of out-patients. 

4 Opened June 15, 1911. 
























































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


357 


SANITARIUMS: 1910—Continued. 


PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING YEAR. 

PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE 

OF YEAR. 


Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Adults 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

Total. 

360 

340 

20 

30 

27 

3 

27 

• 

3 

» $5,200 | 

1,491 

« 

( 2 ) 

110 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

3 1,779 

1,331 

448 

114 

( 2 > 

( s ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

50,954 

m 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

70 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

399 

183 

216 

15 

7 

8 

15 


27,555 

9,050 

9,000 

50 

74 

62 

12 

72 

2 

52,000 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 

95 

50 

45 

95 


( 2 ) 

562 

308 

254 

9 

9 


9 


( 2 ) 

(») 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( s ) 

( 2 > 

75 

23 

52 

12 

5 

7 

12 


6,000 

2,433 

2,433 


39 

39 


39 


1 33,740 

924 

924 


50 

50 


50 


36,000 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 

( j ) 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

5 

4 

1 

5 


( 2 ) 

1,131 

753 

378 

40 

31 

9 

38 

2 

15,138 

80 

50 

30 

16 

10 

6 

16 


12,000 

2,000 

567 

1,433 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( a ) 

840 

449 

391 

35 

16 

19 

33 

2 

( s ) 

1,272 

1,272 


94 

94 


94 


63,943 

810 

800 

10 

6 

6 


6 


2,100 

• 

594 

274 

320 

15 

10 

5 

15 


11,592 

1,200 

835 

365 

40 

26 

14 

37 

3 

( 2 ) 

341 

220 

121 

10 

7 

3 

10 


16,646 

36 

30 

6 

1 

1 


1 


5,785 

1,819 

914 

905 

55 

25 

30 

55 


95,083 

1,150 

383 

767 

54 

( s ) 

< 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

2,459 

1,667 

792 

103 

89 

14 

103 


80,067 

^qq 

478 

121 






( 2 ) 

3 101 

100 

1 

4 

4 


2 

2 

5,000 

182 

90 

92 

9 

6 

3 

9 


5,081 

397 

169 

228 

28 

12 

16 

28 


28,680 

1,842 

791 

1,051 

97 

33 

64 

85 

12 

50,264 


RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 


Derived from— 


Appro¬ 

pria¬ 

tions. 


S3,700 


35,000 


Dona¬ 

tions. 


( 2 ) 


Care of 
patients. 


SI,500 

( 2 ) 

15,954 

( 2 ) 


Other 

sources. 


( 2 ) 


PAYMENTS DURING 

YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

1 S5,200 

S5,200 





15 

( i ) 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

16 

45,318 

45,318 


$80,000 

$80,000 


17 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

18 







19 

27,555 

13,714 

$13,841 

40,173 

40,173 


20 

50,000 

40,000 

10,000 

96,000 

96,000 


21 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

22 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

■ ( 2 ) 


23 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

24 

10,800 

10/800 


20,000 

20,000 


25 

1 30,944 

30,944 


i 50,000 

50,000 


26 

35,000 

35,000 


25,000 

25,000 


27 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

28 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

10,000 

10,000 


29 

15,138 

15,138 


66,900 

66,900 


30 

6,000 

5,000 

1,000 

11,000 

11,000 


31 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

120,000 

120,000 


32 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

< 2 ) 

33 

50,917 

50,917 


150,000 

150,000 


34 

1,800 

1,800 



35 

11,000 

10,000 

1,000 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

36 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

37 

18,652 

17,409 

1,243 

16,600 

16,600 


1 

2 851 

2 644 

207 

11,222 

11,222 


2 

98,997 

84,213 

14,784 

312,691 

307,791 

$4,900 

3 

m 

m 

(2) 

350,000 

350,000 


4 

\ ) 

82,395 

\ j 

77,876 

4,519 

240,300 

229,300 

11,000 

5 

m 


( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


6 

\ j 

600 

\ / 

600 

10,000 

10,000 


7 

5 588 

4,363 

1,225 

14,000 

14,000 


\ 

S 28,680 

27,166 

1,514 

( 2 ) 

100,000 

( 2 ) 

2 

3 51,363 

51,363 


540,080 

321,357 

218,723 

3 


1,000 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


15,138 


( 2 ) 


4,945 


6,050 
( 2 ) 


S196 


( 2 ) 
33,740 
36,000 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

63,943 

1,800 


( 2 ) 


11,311 


18 


534 


12,992 
51,000 
( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

6,000 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


12,000 
( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


300 

11,592 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

g 840 

83,256 

( 2 ) 

73,395 

( 2 ) 

5,000 

4,547 

10.467 

34.468 


S14,367 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


516 


604 


6 Instruction for Hospital Corps. 
6 Enlisted men, Hospital Corps. 


7 Employees. 

•Not available for maintenance of hospital. 






























































































































































































Institution number. 


358 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table IV.— HOSPITALS AND 


4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 

9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 
21 
22 

23 

24 

25 

26 
27 


28 

29 






a 

0 

Sh 


MEDICAL STAFF 
AT CLOSE OF 

NURSES AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 




• 

>—i 

a 

CO 

•5 

© 

YEAR. 




NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of cases treated. 

© 

o . 

,£ CO 

o © 
co co 
*-> 

-I'd 

c3 ►, 
Cl.£ 










o 

£ 
tjj £ 

£ 

•3 

© 

© 

© 

o 

(h 

© 

rO 


-4-i 

£ 

© 

.5 



© 




u 

75 

© 

‘3 

o 

B 

2 

cJ 

o 

"7. 

© 

"v. 

c3 

C 

d 

13 

a 

© 






o 

25 

E-i 

s 


e 

s 

p=( 

V E R M 0 N T—Continued. 













Fort Ethan Allen: 













U. S. Army Post Hospital . 


General. 

1894 

(') 

Yes. 

50 

3 


3 

6 

2 6 


Montpelier: 






16 



Heaton Hospital. 

Private corporation. .. 

General, except contagious, 
incurable, and tubercular. 

1S95 

Yes. 

Yes. 

57 

7 


7 


16 

Heaton fet. 









Pittsford: 













Vermont Sanatorium for Incipient 


Incipient tubercular. 

1907 

No. 

Yes. 

40 

i 

i 


4 


4 







Tuberculosis. 













Proctor: 










13 



Proctor Hospital. 

Vermont Marble Co. 

General. 

1896 

Yes. 

Yes. 

18 

ii 

9 

9 


IS 

St. Albans: 






10 



Warner Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1882 

Yes. 

Yes. 

20 

22 

10 

12 


10 

St. Johnsburg:" 




30 



Brightlook Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1S99 

Yes. 

No. 

26 

(») 


( 3 ) 

15 

15 

“Summer Stt 






8 



St. Johnsburg Hospital. 

Sisters of Charity of Provi¬ 
dence. 

General, except contagious.. 

1894 

No. 

Yes. 

21 

18 


18 

1 

7 

17 Prospect St." 






Winooski: 













Fanny Allen Hospital. 

Hospital Sisters of St. Joseph 

General, except contagious 

1894 

Yes. 

Yes. 

45 

10 

2 

8 

16 


16 







and obstetrical. 











VIRGINIA. 













Alexandria: 













Alexandria Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1871 

Yes. 

Yes. 

51 

6 


6 

7 


7 

Wolf and Pitt Sts. 






Catawba: 













Catawba Sanatorium. 

State of Virginia. 

Incipient tubercular. 

1909 

Yes. 

No. 

110 

2 

2 


10 


10 

Charlottesville : 







University of Virginia Hospital... 
Danville: 

University of Virginia. 

General. 

1901 

Yes. 

Yes. 

115 

6 

6 


30 


30 






Danville General Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

18S4 

Yes. 

Yes. 

75 

6 


6 

20 


20 

261 Jefferson St. 






Fort Hunt: 













U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

(•) 

(') 

Yes. 

12 

1 

1 


5 

2 5 


Fort Monroe: 






U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

U. S. Government.... 

General. 

( 3 ) 

(*) 

Yes. 

76 

4 


4 

12 

2 12 


Fort Myer: 








U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1872 

0) 

Yes. 

50 

3 

3 


11 

2 11 


Fredericksburg: 







Mary Washington Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1897 

Yes. 

No. 

16 

( 3 ) 

9 

( 3 ) 

6 


6 

A St. 





Hampton: 













Dixie Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except chronic and 
contagious. 

1891 

Yes. 

( 5 ) 

23 

4 


4 

23 


23 






Lexington: 












Stonewall Jackson Memorial Hos- 

United Daughters of theCon- 
federacy. 

General. 

1900 

No. 

Yes. 

18 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 




pital. 6 





Washington St. 












Lynchburg: 













City Hospital. 

City of Lynchburg. 

General. r[. 

1885 

No. 

Yes. 

28 

2 


2 

4 


4 

801 Hollins St. 








Home and Retreat Hospital. 

Private organization. 

General. 

18S6 

Yes. 

No. 

50 

18 


IS 

15 


15 

1503 Grace St. 





Norfolk: 













Norfolk Protestant Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

18S7 

Yes. 

Yes. 

140 

97 

3 

94 

35 


35 

Raleigh and Colley "Aves. 





St. Vincent de Paul’s Hospital_ 

Chinch and Wood Sts. 

Sisters of Charitv. 

General. 

1856 

Yes. 

Yes. 

300 

28 

4 

24 

44 


44 





U. S. Naval Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1828 

No. 

Yes. 

318 


7 


52 

38 

14 

Petersburg: 






Birdville Sanatorium 8 . 

Petersburg Anti-Tuberculo¬ 
sis League. 

Tubercular. 

1911 










Home for the Sick. 

General. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

38 

23 

5 

18 

17 

2 

15 

Private corporation.. 

1886 

Madison St. 




Portsmouth: 













King’s Daughters’ Hospital. 

King’s Daughters and Sons.. 

General. 

1897 

Yes. 

Yes. 

30 

25 

i 

24 

9 


9 

Emmet St. 



Richmond: 













Memorial Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1903 

Yes. 

Yes. 

150 

31 

6 

25 

45 


45 

Twelfth and Broad Sts. 





Pine Camp 8 . 

Tuberculosis Camp Society.. 

Incurable tubercular. 

1911 










Brook Hill. 











Retreat for the Sick. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious 
and insane. 

1877 

Yes. 

Yes. 

54 

25 

2 

23 

17 


17 

319 North Twelfth St. 




Richmond Eye, Ear, and Throat 
Infirmary. 

217 Governor St. 

Private corporation. 

Eye, ear, nose, and throat.. 

1879 

No. 

Yes. 

26 

5 

i 

4 

2 


2 







Richmond Hospital. 

Private association. 

General. 

1903 

Yes. 

Yes. 

25 

12 


12 

14 


14 

406 East Baker St. 





Sheltering Arms Free Hospital.... 
1008 East Clay St. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1889 

Yes. 

No. 

57 

( 3 ) 

2 

( 3 ) 

14 


14 






Virginia Hospital. 

University College of Medi¬ 
cine. 

General. 

1893 

Yes. 

Yes. 

80 

6S 

3 

65 

38 


38 

TlOO East Clay St. 




Roanoke: 













City Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious-. 

1899 

Yes. 

Yes. 

42 

35 


35 

12 


12 

Staunton: 




King’s Daughters’ Hospital. 

King’s Daughters. 

General, except contagious.. 

1896 

Yes. 

No. 

24 

12 


12 

10 


10 

212 East Frederick St. 




Strasburg: 













Strasburg Hospital. 

Private organization. 

General, except contagious.. 

1903 

Yes. 

Yes. 

52 

( 3 ) 

c 8 ) 

( 3 ) 

11 

i 

10 



Queen and Holliday Sts. 









Winchester: 













Winchester Memorial Hospital.... 
Stewart and Clifford Sts. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1903 

Yes. 

Yes. 

36 

12 


12 

10 


10 




. 


1 Instruction for Hospital Corps. 3 Not reported. 

2 Enlisted men, Hospital Corps. 4 Exclusive of out-patients. 




















































































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


359 


SANITARIUMS: 1910—Continued. 


PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING YEAR. 

PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 

RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 

i 

PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 11 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Adults 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

Total. 

Derived from— 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

Appro¬ 

pria¬ 

tions. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
patients. 

Other 

sources. 

1,127 

1,127 


17 

17 


17 


( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


( 3 ) 


( 3 ) 

m 


(3) 

( 3 ) 


4 

391 

165 

226 

16 

7 

9 

12 

4 

$22,575 

$3,000 

$1,462 

$15,401 

$2,712 

( 3 ) 

$19,148 

\ / 

( s ) 

893,869 

$50,000 

$43,869 

5 

141 

65 

76 

36 

15 

21 

36 


31,637 


11,082 

14,646 

5,909 

$31,636 

25,135 

$6,501 

270,000 

135,000 

135,000 

6 

* 228 

135 

93 

13 

6 

7 

13 


12,267 



1,767 

10,500 

12,103 

12,103 

7 

258 

88 

170 

11 

2 

9 

11 


9,453 

1,000 

44 

6,209 

2,200 

10,185 

10,185 


71,000 

28,000 

43,000 

8 

444 

223 

221 

( s ) 

( 3 ) 

( s ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 > 

13,000 

( 3 ) 

1,250 

( 3 ) 

( s ) 

11,000 

11,000 


30,000 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

9 

175 

69 

106 

15 

5 

10 

15 


( 3 ) 



( 3 ) 


( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


10 

368 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

40 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

17,986 


1,338 

13,947 

2,701 

17,986 

16,250 

1,736 

40,000 

40,000 


11 

348 

169 

179 

17 

9 

8 

17 

7,412 

500 

820 

3,821 

2,271 

8,372 

7,972 

400 

25,000 

15,000 

10,000 

1 

210 

110 

100 

90 

45 

45 

90 


27,000 

15,000 


12,000 


67,000 

27,000 

40,000 

75,000 

75,000 


2 

1,782 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

110 

110 


110 


44,037 

18,000 


22,965 

3,072 

44,037 

44,037 

145,000 

145,000 


3 

619 

294 

325 

18 

15 

3 

18 


16,196 

2,500 

227 

13,358 

111 

17,487 

16,4S7 

1,000 

i 

60,000 

60,000 


4 

105 

105 


2 

2 


2 


( 3 ) 

( 8 ) 


( 3 ) 


( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


5 

1,146 

1,146 


12 

12 


12 


( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


( 3 ) 


( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 8 ) 


6 

449 

449 


9 

9 


9 


( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


( 3 ) 


( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


7 

121 

54 

67 

3 

1 

2 

3 


3,837 

44 

2,727 

1,066 

3,834 

3,633 

201 

19,000 

10,000 

9,000 

8 

287 

136 

151 

11 

5 

6 

10 

1 

12,106 


2,786 

5,068 

4,252 

12,144 

12,144 


5,500 

5,500 

9 

14 

12 

2 

2 

1 

1 


2 

575 


475 

100 

2,975 

275 

2,700 

12,775 

11,275 

1,500 

% 

10 

368 

181 

187 

22 

12 

10 

22 


7,539 

6,979 


560 


6,979 

6,979 

10,000 

10,000 


11 

(3) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

30 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

14,220 

1,500 

400 

12,320 


( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

50,000 

50,000 


12 

1,440 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

46 

IS 

28 

42 

4 

33,770 

1,098 

32,672 


47,989 

44,897 

3,092 

185,000 

185,000 


13 

2,961 

1,951 

1,010 

127 

75 

52 

115 

12 

7 76,214 

100 

11,995 

58,172 

5,947 

7 82,520 

49,979 

32,541 

7 500,000 

500,000 


14 

1,814 

1,814 


198 

198 


198 


( 3 ) 

( s ) 


( 3 ) 


( 3 > 

79,926 

(») 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


15 












16 

427 

234 

193 

19 

9 

10 

18 

1 

13,139 

1,000 

4,706 

6,789 

644 

12,953 

12,467 

486 

60,245 

50,000 

10,245 

17 

426 

241 

185 

23 

10 

13 

23 


11,310 

1,200 

1,269 

8,389 

452 

11,317 

10,654 

663 

24,003 

24,003 


18 

2,121 

1,020 

1,101 

99 

52 

47 

84 

15 

72,909 

500 

4,488 

64,699 

3,222 

72,897 

72,897 


180,000 

175,000 

5,000 

19 




















20 

496 

213 

283 

26 

9 

17 

20 

6 

21,2S4 

500 

473 

16,069 

4,242 

20,666 

20,666 


65,190 

30,000 

36,190 

21 

4 242 

136 

106 

7 

5 

2 

7 


4,596 

2,000 

43 

2,553 


4,925 

4,925 


18,000 

18,000 


22 

120 

51 

69 

( 3 ) 

( 3 > 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( a ) 

400 

3 

( 3 ) 


( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

(») 

( s ) 

23 

398 

( 3 ) 

( 3 > 

38 

11 

27 

30 

8 

28,094 

1,500 

2,182 


24,412 

27,562 

7,562 

20,000 

74,000 

35,000 

39,000 

24 

1,113 

613 

500 

.45 

( 3 ) 

( s ) 

( s ) 

( s ) 

39,380 


703 

38,295 

382 

44,891 

38,006 

6,885 

98,884 

93,314 

5,570 

25 

467 

306 

161 

21 

14 

7 

20 

1 

12,436 

1,997 

1,425 

8,614 

400 

12,439 

12,189 

250; 

9 4,000 

9 4,000 


26 

272 

100 

172 

8 

1 4 

4 

7 

1 

11,177 

300 

2,297 

7,562 

1,018 

11,420 

11,205 

215 

25,000 

25,000 


27 

75 

40 

35 

15 

11 

4 

14 

1 

5,920 


100 

5,820 


6,040 

6,040 


30,000 

20,000 

10,000 

28 

300 

140 

160 

J 

20 

10 

10 

19 

1 

12,300 

600 

2,100 

9,600 


12,300 

10,200 

2,100 

30,000 

30,000 

29 


8 Colored only*. 

6 Open only when funds are available. 


7 Includes report of dispensary. 

8 Not opened until 1911. 


8 Equipment, 










































































































































































Institution number, 


360 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table IV.— HOSPITALS AND 


NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of cases treated. 

Year founded. 

Training school for 

nurses. 

Colored patients re¬ 

ceived. 

Number of beds. 

MEDICAL STAFF 
AT CLOSE OF 
YEAR. 

NURSES AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 

«— 4 
s 
+-> 
o 

Eh 

-4-> 

o 

2 

"c/3 

© 

Ph 

tub 

.9 

w 

• i—4 
> 

3 

o 

EH 

s 

o3 

'cz 

a 

© 

WASHINGTON. 













Aberdeen: 













Aberdeen General Hospital... 

Private orgnaization... 

General. 

1900 

Yes. 

Yes. 

45 

6 

2 

4 

ii 


11 

Broadway and Heron Sts. 













St. Joseph’s Hospital_ 

Sisters of St. Dominic... 

General. 

1891 

Yes. 

Yes. 

00 

7 


7 

7 


7 

57 North G St. 













Bellingham: 













St. Joseph’s Hospital. 

Sisters of St. Joseph of Peace. 

General. 

1890 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

15 


15 

21 

i 

20 

Elk St. 












St. Luke’s Hospital. 

Private corporation (Epis- 

General, except contagious.. 

1892 

Yes. 

Yes. 

60 


C 1 ) 

0) 

10 


10 

Jersey St. 

copal). 








Bremerton: 













U. S. Naval Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1903 

No. 

Yes. 

99 

2 

2 


13 

13 


Puget Sound. 













Colfax: 













St. Ignatius Hospital. 

Sisters of Charity of Provi- 

General. 

1893 

Yes. 

Yes. 

53 

7 


7 

5 


5 

1232 Mill St. 

dence. 












Everett: 













Providence Hospital. 

Sisters of Charity of Provi- 

General. 

1905 

No. 

Yes. 

97 

25 


25 

18 

4 

14 

Pacific and Kromer Sts. 

dence. 












Fort Casey: 













U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1899 

( 2 ) 

Yes. 

15 

1 

1 


8 

3 8 


Fort Flagler: 












U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1899 

( 2 ) 

Yes. 

18 

1 

1 


2 

32 


Fort Ward: ' 












U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1903 

( 2 ) 

Yes. 

6 

1 

1 


5 

35 


Hoquiam: 












Hoquiam General Hospital. 

Private organization. 

General. 

1903 

0) 

0) 

50 

0) 

0) 

(>) 

0) 

(*) 

0) 

*K and Sixth Sts. 





McGowan: 













U. S. Armv Post Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1903 

( 2 ) 

Yes. 

6 

1 

1 


5 

35 


Fort Columbia. 












Olympia: 













St. Peter’s Hospital. 

Sisters of Charity of Provi- 

General. 

1887 

No. 

No. 

91 

20 


20 

14 

2 

12 


dence. 












Port Angeles: 













Port Angeles General Hospital. 

Private organization. 

Surgical. 

1903 

Yes. 

Yes. 

26 

3 

1 

2 

4 

1 

3 

Eighth and Peabody.* 













Port Townsend: 













St. John’s Hospital. 

Sisters of Charity of Provi- 

General. 

1890 

No. 

Yes. 

60 

6 


6 

9 

1 

8 


dence. 












U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1904 

( 2 ) 

Yes. 

40 

3 

3 


6 

36 


Fort Worden. 












U. S. Marine Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1895 

No. 

Yes. 

100 

1 

1 


2 

2 


Franklin and Quincy Sts. 













Seattle: 













Children’s Orthopedic Hospital.... 

Private corporation. 

Surgical and orthopedic. 

1907 

No. 

Yes. 

12 

10 


10 

3 


3 

2107 Warren.* 













Municipal Hospital. 

City of Seattle. 

General. 

1909 

Yes. 

Yes. 

56 

(») 

3 

0) 

18 

2 

16 

Fourth Ave. and Yesler Way. 











Providence Hospital. 

Sisters of Charity of Provi- 

General, except contagious^ 

1878 

Yes. 

Yes. 

260 

100 


100 

66 

7 

59 

Fifth Ave. and Madison St. 

dence. 












Seattle General Hospital. 

Seattle Deaconess Associa- 

General, except contagious.. 

1895 

Yes. 

Yes. 

120 

77 

2 

75 

56 


56 

909 Fifth Ave. 

tion of M. E. Church. 











U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1900 

( 2 ) 

Yes. 

34 

2 

2 


12 

3 12 


Fort Lawton. 












Wayside Emergency Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

Emergency. 

1904 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

7 

1 

6 

12 


12 

'Second Ave. north and Re- 













publican St. 













South Bend: 













South Bend General Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

General, except insane. 

1903 

Yes. 

Yes. 

30 

4 

2 

2 

5 


5 

Spokane: 













City Emergency Hospital. 

City of Spokane. 

Emergency. 

1906 

No. 

Yes. 

3 

3 


3 

2 

2 


City Hall. 













City Isolation Hospital. 

City of Spokane. 

Acute infectious. 

(') 

No. 

Yes. 

50 

1 


i 

3 

1 

2 

'Alta Vista (northwest of city 












limits). 













Maria Beard Deaconess Hospital... 

Methodist Deaconess Asso- 

General. 

1892 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

( l ) 


(*> 

28 


28 

715 Fourth Ave. 

ciation. 










Sacred Heart Hospital. 

Sisters of Charity of Provi- 

General, except contagious .. 

( l ) 

Yes. 

Yes. 

350 

13 


13 

50 

8 

42 

McLellan and'Eighth Ave. 

dence. 






St. Luke’s Hospital. 

Private corporation (Epis- 

General. 

1897 

Yes. 

Yes. 

65 

H 

1 

10 

30 


30 

A St. and Summit Boulevard. 

copal). 









U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1899 

( 2 ) 

Yes. 

41 

3 

3 


12 

312 


Fort George Wright. 












Tacoma: 













Fannie C. Paddock Memorial Hos- 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1882 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

50 


50 

30 


30 

pital. 











South J and Third Sts. 













Northern Pacific Hospital 6 . 

Northern Pacific Beneficial 

General. 

1882 

No. 

Yes. 

110 

5 

5 


19 

12 

7 


Association. 











St. Joseph’s Hospital. 

Sisters of St. Francis. 

General. 

1891 

Yes. 

Yes. 

80 

60 


60 

24 

2 

22 

South Nineteenth and J Sts. 












Vancouver: 













St. Joseph’s Hospital. 

Sisters of Charity of Provi- 

General. 

1860 

No. 

Yes. 

54 

(') 

0) 

0) 

10 

2 

8 

Reserve and Ninth Sts. 

dence. 







U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1851 

( 2 ) 

Yes. 

65 

5 

5 


( 3 ) 

( 8 ) 


Vancouver Barracks. 










Walla Walla: 













St. Marv’s Hospital. 

Sisters of Charity of Provi- 

General, except contagious.. 

1876 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

18 


18 

14 

3 

11 

208 Fifth St. 

dence. 









1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 
21 
22 

23 

24 

25 

26 

27 

28 

29 

30 

31 

32 

33 

34 

35 

36 


1 Not reported. 


2 Instruction for Hospital Corps. 


8 Enlisted men, Hospital Corps. 


4 Includes report of dispensary. 








































































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


361 


SANITARIUMS: 1910—Continued. 


PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING YEAR. 

PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 

RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Adults 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

Total. 

Appro¬ 

pria¬ 

tions. 

Derivec 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

from— 

Care of 
patients. 

Other 

sources. 

527 

349 

178 

14 

9 

5 

14 


$20,400 



$20,400 


526 

296 

230 

28 

16 

12 

28 


12,905 

$2,209 

$1,100 

9,596 


720 

445 

275 

42 

22 

20 

42 


21,106 

167 

15,992 

$4 947 

656 

400 

256 

26 

15 

11 

21 

5 

18,236 


1,744 

15,730 

762 

368 

368 


13 

13 


13 


(i) 

C) 


0) 


352 

200 

152 

27 

14 

13 

23 

4 

11,917 

907 

10,015 

995 

787 

4S3 

304 

45 

30 

15 

45 


22,154 


337 

21,531 

2M) 

206 

202 

4 

4 

4 


4 


(!) 

(!) 


C 1 ) 


220 

219 

1 

11 

11 


11 


( l ) 

(1) 


0) 


68 

68 







(1) 

m 


(l) 


0) 

0) 

0) 

( l ) 

( l ) 

« 

0) 

0) 

P) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

(>) 

160 

160 


4 

4 


4 


(!) 

(') 


(1) 


618 

437 

181 

51 

( l ) 

0) 

C 1 ) 

0) 

4 22,421 

3,426 

10 

18,985 


78 

42 

36 

5 

4 

1 

5 


3,356 

375 


2,981 


80 

62 

18 

13 

9 

4 

12 

1 

7,347 


806 

3,081 

3,460 

287 

284 

3 

13 

13 


13 


(iy 

(i) 


(*> 


6 286 

286 


33 

33 


33 


18,605 

18,605 



57 

30 

27 

12 

8 

4 


12 

17, 732 

13,907 

1,905 

1,920 

1,545 

1,216 

329 

38 

30 

8 

38 


23,814 

23,814 



2,981 

1,958 

1,023 

156 

102 

54 

139 

17 

91,383 

2,475 

88,616 

292 

2,669 

1,445 

1,224 

87 

51 

36 

86 

1 

95,692 



95,192 

500 

237 

237 


7 

7 


7 


(i) 

(!) 


(i) 


630 

350 

280 

60 

33 

27 

46 

14 

18,418 

10,200 

1,889 

6,329 


200 

150 

50 

8 

5 

3 

8 


6,000 



6,000 


1 975 

1,855 

120 






4,120 

4,120 



240 

100 

140 

15 

8 

7 

6 

9 

15,563 

15,563 




1,137 

487 

650 

41 

18 

23 

36 

5 

36,915 

1,030 

35,048 

837 

3,400 

1,000 

2,400 

215 

90 

125 

188 

27 

0) 

0) 

0) 

(») 

P) 

1,124 

593 

531 

34 

17 

17 

31 

3 

38,243 


324 

35,946 

1,973 

322 

322 


14 

14 


14 


(i) 

0) 


(!) 


1 800 

1 244 

556 

70 

48 

22 

70 


50,000 


50,000 


1 327 

^280 

47 

97 

94 

3 

97 


( 7 ) 


( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

1,791 

1,000 

791 

80 

48 

32 

74 

6 

52,107 


924 

45,594 

5,589 

400 

150 

250 

28 

17 

11 

28 


14,500 


4,600 

8,500 

1,400 

1 1 ^9 

1 146 

6 

32 

32 


32 


(i) 

0) 

(1) 


965 

610 

355 

47 

34 

13 

44 

3 

11,486 

18 

11,468 



PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number 1 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

$18,000 

$18,000 

| 




i 

15,124 

12,124 

$3,000 

$65,000 

$65,000 


2 

97,976 

17,976 

80,000 

100,000 

100,000 


3 

18,467 

18,249 

218 

35,300 

35,000 

$300 

4 

P) 

P) 

(') 

P) 

0) 


5 

12,930 

12,012 

918 

22,000 

22,000 


6 

22,154 

20,996 

1,158 

55,000 

55,000 


7 

0) 

P) 

P) 

( l ) 

0) 


8 

0) 

0) 

P) 

P) 

0) 


9 

P) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 


10 

p) 

P) 

P) 

(0 

0) 

( l ) 

11 

0) 

p) 

P) 

p) 

P) 


12 

4 21,112 

19,563 

1,549 

4 42,919 

42,919 


13 

3,000 

3,000 


9,000 

9,000 


14 

7,025 

5,232 

1,793 

25,321 

25,000 

321 

15 

0) 

0) 

P) 

0) 

( l ) 


16 

18,605 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 


17 

9,903 

5,889 

4,014 

75,743 

23,787 

51,956 

18 

23,814 

20,931 

2,883 




19 

88,162 

87,310 

852 

650,000 

650,000 


20 

93,142 

0) 

P) 

10,000 


10,000 

21 

0) 

0) 

p) 

P) 

( l ) 


22 

18,418 

18,418 





23 

3,000 

3,000 


18,000 

18,000 


24 

4,120 

4,120 



25 

15,563 

15,563 


(i) 

(i) 


26 

37,792 

35,264 

2,528 

69,000 

69,000 


27 

(>) 

0) 

0) 

P) 

( l ) 

C) 

28 

41,917 

41,917 


94,581 

88,716 

5,865 

29 

P) 

(0 

0) 

( l ) 

0) 


30 

49,500 

47,500 

2,000 

75,000 

75,000 


31 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 


( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

32 

0) 

36,897 

P) 

P) 

(0 


33 

54,500 

7,000 

47,500 

26,500 

26,500 


34 

P) 

P) 

0) 

( l ) 

0) 


35 

10,989 

10,989 


44,106 

44,106 


36 







s Exclusive of out-patients. 


6 Employees and their families. 


7 Included in report of Northern Pacific Hospital, Brainerd, Minn 























































































































































































Institution number. 


362 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table IV.— HOSPITALS AND 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


WEST VIRGINIA. 
Charleston: 

1 Charleston General Hospital 


2 

3 

4 

5 

6 


Clarksburg: 

Kessler Hospital. 

St. Mary’s Hospital. 

464 Mechanic St. 

Elkins: 

Davis Memorial Hospital. 

Fairmont: 

Miners’ Hospital No. 3. 

Guffey and Columbia Sts. 
Glendale: 

Reynolds Memorial Hospital. 


7 


Hansford: 

Sheltering Arms Hospital 


8 

9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 


Hinton: 

Hinton Hospital. 

Temple and Fourth Aves. 
Huntington: 

Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Hos¬ 
pital. 3 

Eighteenth St. and Sixth Ave. 

Mount Hope Hospital. 

Fourth Ave. and Fifth St. 
McKendree: 

Miners’ Hospital No. 2. 

Parkersburg: 

Parkersburg City Hospital. 

516 Thirteenth St. 

St. Joseph’s Hospital. 

Fifth and Avery Sts. 

Welch: 

Miners’ Hospital No. 1. 

Wheeling: 

City Hospital. 

Eofl and Twentieth Sts. 

Wheeling Hospital. 

109 Main St. 


WISCONSIN. 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 


Appleton: 

St. Elizabeth’s Hospital. 

Lake St. 

Ashland: 

St. Joseph’s Hospital. 

304 East Front St. 

Beloit: 

H. P. Strong Emergency Hospital. 
State St. and East Grand Ave. 

Chippewa Falls: 

St. Joseph’s Hospital. 

Pearl and Spruce Sts. 

Eau Claire: 

Luther Hospital. 

Chestnut and Bellinger Sts. 

Sacred Heart Hospital. 

Dewey St. 

Fond du Lac: 

St. Agnes Hospital. 

390 East Division St. 

Green Bay: 

Deaconess Sanitarium. 

744 South Webster St. 

Green Bay Isolation Hospital. 


10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 


St. Mary’s Hospital 6. 

403 South Webster Ave. 

St. Vincent’s Hospital. 

840 Webster Ave. 

Janesville: 

Detention Hospital. 

840 South Bluff St. 

Palmer Memorial Mercy Hospital. 
566 North Washington St. 

Kenosha: 

Kenosha Hospital. 

529 Chicago St. 

Keshena: 

Keshena Hospital 6 . 

La Crosse: 

La Crosse Hospital. 

Thirteenth and Badger Sts. 

Lutheran Hospital. 

1910 Mormon Coolee Road. 

St. Francis Hospital. 

Tenth and Market Sts. 

Madison: 

Madison General Hospital. 

925 Mound St. 

Manitowoc: 

Holy Family Hospital. 

Western Ave. 


1 Equipment. 


Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of cases treated. 

Year founded. 

Training sell ool fo 

nurses. 

Colored patients re¬ 

ceived. 

Number of beds. 

MEDICAL staff 
AT CLOSE OF 
YEAR. 

NURSES AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 

73 

■4-j 

o 

fl 

© 

*55 

© 

.a 

'55 

> 

73 

-m 

o 

Eh 

© 

a 

© 

73 

a 

© 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious 

1904 

Yes. 

Yes. 

60 

21 

l 

20 

15 


15 


or infectious. 











Private corporation. _ 

General 

1896 

Yes. 

Yes. 

35 

3 


3 

10 


10 

Sisters of St. Joseph... 

General, except contagious.. 

1901 

Yes. 

Yes. 

90 

35 


35 

25 


25 


General, except contagious.. 

1903 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

8 

l 

7 

12 


12 

State of West Virginia. 

Emergency. 

1899 

Yes. 

Yes. 

45 

2 

l 

1 

8 

i 

7 

Private corporation (Epis- 

General.. 

1897 

Yes. 

Yes. 

84 

31 


31 

12 


12 

copal). 












Private corporation (Epis- 

General, except contagious.. 

1887 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

4 

2 

2 

17 

i 

16 

copal). 













General, except,contagious.. 

1901 

Yes. 

No. 

75 

6 

6 


18 


18 

Association of employees.... 

General, except smallpox_ 

1900 

No. 

No. 

22 

2 

1 

1 

4 


4 

Private corporation. 

Surgical. 

1910 

Yes. 

Yes. 

60 

9 

3 

6 

12 

2 

10 

State of West Virginia. 

General. 

1901 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

4 

2 

2 

6 


6 

City of Parkersburg. 

General, except contagious.. 

1897 

Yes. 

Yes. 

30 

10 


10 

5 


5 

Sisters of St. Joseph. 

General, except contagious.. 

1900 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

4 20 

% 

20 

15 

1 

14 

State of West Virginia. 

Surgical. 

1899 

No. 

Yes. 

60 

2 

1 

1 

5 


5 

Private corporation.. 

General, except chronic 

1892 

Yes. 


60 

14 


14 

17 


17 

Sisters of St. Joseph. 

General, except contagious.. 

1850 

Yes. 

Yes. 

120 

(2) 


( 2 ) 

29 

4 

25 

Sisters of St. Francis. 

General, except contagious.. 

1900 

No. 

Yes. 

50 

23 


23 

12 


12 

Sisters, Poor Handmaids of 

General, except contagious.. 

1884 

No. 

No. 

154 

11 

7 

4 

22 

2 

20 

Jesus Christ. 












Private corporation. 

E mergenc y.. 

1899 

Yes. 

Yes. 

17 

12 

8 

4 

5 


5 

Hospital Sisters of St. Fran- 

General, except contagious 

1885 

No. 

Yes. 

120 

( ! ) 


( s ) 

29 

1 

28 

cis. 

and insane. 











Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1905 

Yes. 

No. 

40 

12 


12 

14 


14 

Hospital Sisters of St. Fran- 

General, except contagious.. 

1890 

No. 

Yes. 

125 

29 


29 

32 

1 

31 

cis. 












Sisters of St. Agnes. 

General. 

1896 

Yes. 

Yes. 

60 

20 


20 

19 

1 

18 

Methodist Deaconess Asso- 

General, except contagious 

1908 

Yes. 

Yes. 

25 

16 

1 

15 

9 


9 

ciation. 

and insane. 











City of Green Bay. 

Scarlet fever, diphtheria, 

1900 

No. 

Yes. 

20 

2 


2 

2 

2 



smallpox, and tubercular. 










Sisters of Misericorde_•_ 

General. 

1901 

Yes. 

No. 

155 

10 


10 

15 


15 

Hospital Sisters of St. Fran- 

General, except contagious.. 

1888 

No. 

Yes. 

130 

15 


15 

31 


31 

cis. 












City of Janesville. 

Contagious. 

1889 

No. 

Yes. 

5 

1 


1 

1 


1 

Sisters of Mercy. 

General. 

1907 

Yes. 

Yes. 

20 

35 


35 

10 


10 

Private association. 

General. 

1903 

Yes. 

Yes. 

23 

30 


30 

14 


14 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1886 

No. 

No. 

16 

1 

1 


4 


4 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.. 

1899 

Yes. 

Yes. 

50 

9 

8 

1 

16 


10 

Private corporation (Luth- 

General. 

1899 

Yes. 

No. 

80 

12 

7 

5 

29 


29 

eran). 

Franciscan Sisters of the 

General. 

1883 

Yes. 

Yes. 

100 

13 

1 

12 

30 

1 

29 

Perpetual Adoration. 












Private corporation. 

General, except contagious 

1898 

Yes. 

Yes. 

60 

10 

1 

9 

22 


22 


and infectious. 











Franciscan Sisters of Charity 

General, except contagious.. 

1899 

Yes. 

Yes. 

70 

20 


20 

9 

1 

8 


2 Not reported. 3 Employees and their families. 























































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


363 


SANITARIUMS: 1910—Continued. 


PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING YEAR. 


PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 


Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

699 

233 

466 

24 

391 

150 

241 

15 

975 

612 

363 

33 

374 

239 

135 

19 

329 

329 


39 

541 

274 

267 

28 

1,028 

760 

268 

49 

770 

422 

348 

48 

330 

314 

16 

13 

262 

86 

176 

20 

394 

337 

57 

30 

214 

52 

162 

16 

300 

100 

200 

30 

791 

740 

51 

54 

958 

521 

437 

55 

1,050 

567 

483 

( 2 ) 

652 

324 

328 

32 

1,067 

780 

287 

66 

280 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

25 

1,876 

1,201 

675 

106 

524 

221 

303 

22 

1,637 

737 

900 

77 

1,066 

455 

611 

32 

523 

200 

323 

20 

14 

6 

8 

2 

709 

285 

424 

95 

2,270 

1,254 

1,016 

83 

2 

2 


2 

374 

144 

230 

21 

395 

209 

186 

13 

67 

31 

36 

11 

446 

167 

279 

23 

1,263 

615 

648 

50 

1,209 

574 

635 

85 

1,279 

460 

*19 

22 

357 

221 

136 

35 


Male. 


Fe¬ 

male. 


Adults 


14 


5 

24 


13 

39 

15 

32 

27 

13 

s 

27 

5 

10 

46 

30 


10 


10 

9 


V) 


22 

49 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

14 

( 2 ) 


16 


33 


( 2 ) 


12 


28 


( 2 ) 


13 

17 

21 


12 

3 

11 

20 

8 

25 


( 2 ) 


10 

17 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


* 

i 

16 

11 


62 


( 2 ) 


21 


14 
22 

( 2 ) 

15 

14 


24 


15 

31 


17 

39 

27 

44 

44 


Chil¬ 

dren. 


RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 


( 2 ) 


17 

30 

14 

27 

54 

52 


( 2 ) 


29 

58 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

1 

( 2 ) 


v 

) 

30 

18 

2 

40 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


Total. 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


oo 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


18 

13 

11 

22 

44 

) 

22 

34 


( 2 ) 


Derived from— 


Appro¬ 

pria¬ 

tions. 


$21,804 


12,556 
22,892 


( 2 ) 

17,090 

13,744 

26,177 

20,517 

( 2 ) 

13,123 

22,897 
14,447 
4 9,400 

32,000 

27,874 

34,069 

18,289 
18,016 
( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

4 1,525 
( 2 ) 

35,321 

12,225 
820 
23,111 
( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

10,100 

10,285 

2,200 
14,740 
36,S00 
( 2 ) 

29,009 

18,087 


( 2 ) 
817,000 


21,500 

8,911 


30,000 


Dona¬ 

tions. 


2,138 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


820 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


500 


2,200 


( 2 ) 


900 


$172 
( 2 ) 


6,500 

818 


( 2 ) 


Care of 
patients. 


Other 

sources. 


300 


2,088 

1,256 


333 

203 


( 2 ) 

30,000 
( 2 ) 


563 


6,940 
( 2 ) 


821,804 

12,556 

21,616 

( 2 ) 

90 

7,244 

23,227 

20,517 

( 2 ) 
13,123 

I, 397 
5,536 
9,100 

2,000 

25,786 

32,813 

14,916 
15,675 
( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

10,505 

( 2 ) 

35,321 

II, 662 


753 


850 


( 2 ) 

2,359 

4,228 


15,344 
( 2 ) 


9,600 

9,282 


13,561 
36,800 
( 2 ) 

25,750 

13,859 


$1,104 
( 2 ) 


2,132 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 


Total. 


3,040 


( 2 ) 

1,020 

( 2 ) 


827 


( 2 ) 


250 


329 


( 2 ) 


For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 


$17,829 


8,696 

23,460 


( 2 ) 
15,976 

13, 744 

24,130 

37,224 

( 2 ) 

12,710 

( 2 ) 
8,911 
4 9,400 

28,000 

34,144 

34,069 

18,289 

25,975 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

41,042 
( 2 ) 

31,753 

11,294 

( 2 ) 

23,100 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 
9,000 

9,785 

2,200 
14,766 
35,252 
( 2 ) 

26,965 

17,217 


For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 


$17,829 

8,696 

21,960 

( 2 ) 

15,976 

11,312 

23,755 

28,724 

( 2 ) 

5,524 

14,518 
6,911 
9,100 

25,000 

31,902 

29,569 


10,627 

22,670 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

11,042 
( 2 ) 

31,753 

10,294 
820 
13,777 
( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

9,000 

9,785 

2,200 
14,766 
33,944 
( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

11,187 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

30, C 
( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

9,3 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 


Land, 



build- 

In- 

Total. 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

vested 

funds. 

1 $15,000 

i $15,000 


30,000 

60,000 

100,000 

30,000 
60,000 



100,000 

25,000 

134,675 


25,000 

161,125 


$26,450 

123,135 

100,000 

23,135 

50,000 

50,000 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


100,000 

100,000 


35,000 

35,000 


15,000 

15,000 


4 40,000 

40,000 


50,000 

• 

50,000 


! ( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

....... 

) 100,000 

100,000 


2 100,000 

100,000 


5 175,000 

175,000 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

1 66,771 

66,771 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

75,000 

75,000 

25,000 


0 25,000 


10,000 

10,000 


3 85,672 

85,672 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

2,500 

2,500 

. 

35,000 

35,000 


125,000 

115,000 

10,000 

61,000 

50,00C 

11,000 

8 80,000 

80,00C 

. 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

63,756 

50,001 

13,756 

0 75,000 

75,00( 

). 


o 

& 

s 

p 

p 

a 

.2 

P 

4-> 

*43 

co 

P 


4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 


8 

9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 


4 Includes report of dispensary. 


& Women and children. 


6 Formerly Menominee Indian Hospital. 






























































































































































































































364 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table IV.— HOSPITALS AND 







a 

1 

© 


MEDICAL STAFF 

NURSES AT CLOSE 









AT CLOSE 

YEAR. 

OF 

OF YEAR. 

£ 





O 







a 

3 

d 

a 

0 

’•H 

d 

•H 

CO 

NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of cases treated. 

T3 

© 

g 

& 

u 

© 

O . 

,d co 
© © 
co co 

bn 

2 
hjj d 

1 

e 

d 

•2-d 

&£ 

4) 

© 

© 

M 

O 

umber of beds 

2 

0 

d 

© 

2 

’w 

© 

W> 

d 

+* 

2 

2 

■4-i 

O 

© 

2 

© 

2 

a 

4) 

a 





H 

O 

A 

E- 1 


> 

Eh 

a 

pH 


WISCONSIN-Continued. 














Marshfield: 










12 



21 

St. Joseph’s Hospital. 

Sisters of the Sorrowful 
Mother. 

General, except contagious.. 

1890 

Yes. 

Yes. 

65 

8 


8 


12 

St. Joseph St. 






Milwaukee: 













22 

Children’s Free Hospital. 

Private corporation.. 

General. 

1894 

No. 

Yes. 

65 

20 

1 

19 

15 


15 

219 Tenth St. 










23 

Hanover Hospital. 

Private corporation.. 

General.. 

1903 

Yes. 

No. 

45 

26 

1 

25 

20 


20 

Hanover and Madison Sts. 










24 

Industrial Emergency Hospital 2 .. 
83 Nineteenth St. 

Private individual.. 

General. 

1910 

No. 

Yes. 

12 

2 

2 


2 


2 










25 

Isolation Hospital No. 1. 

City of Milwaukee 

Smallpox and erysipelas 

1877 

No. 

Yes. 

40 

1 


1 

3 


3 

Eighteenth Ave. and Mitchell 
St. 

Isolation Hospital No. 2. 










26 

City of Milwaukee 

Scarlet fever and diphtheria. 

1900 

No. 

Yes. 

35 

0) 


0) 

4 


4 

102 Seventh Ave. 






27 

Johnston Emergency Hospital.... 
316 Sycamore St. 

City of Milwaukee. 

E mergency. 

1896 

No. 

Yes. 

36 

56 

2 

54 

11 

3 

8 










28 

Lakeside Hospital. 

Private individual.. 

General. 

(') 

1863 

Yes. 

Yes. 

30 

31 

1 

30 

24 


24 

29 

410 Prospect Ave. 

Milwaukee Hospital. 

Institution of Protestant 

General, except contagious.. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

86 

15 

3 

12 

33 

1 

32 

Twenty-second, State, and 

Deaconesses (Lutheran). 






Cedar Sts. 












30 

Milwaukee Infants’ Home and 

Private corporation.. 

Infants requiring correct 
feeding and hygiene. 

1882 

Yes. 

Yes. 

30 

5 


5 

13 


13 

Hospital. 









519 Prospect Ave. 












31 

Milwaukee Maternity Hospital.... 
554 Fourth St. 


Maternity and gynecological. 

1906 

No. 

Yes. 

18 

22 

1 

21 

4 


4 





32 

Misericordia Hospital. 

Sisters of Misericorde... 

General.. 

1908 

No. 

Yes. 

30 

32 


32 

7 


7 

2224 Chestnut St. 







33 

Mount Sinai Hospital. 

Jewish Hospital Association. 

General 

1902 

No. 

Yes. 

27 

22 

22 


7 


7 

Fourth and Walnut Sts. 







34 

St. Joseph’s Hospital. 

Sisters of St. Francis. 

General . 

1879 

Yes. 

No. 

130 

0) 

0) 

(>) 

38 


38 

Fourth St. and Reservoir Ave. 





35 

St. Mary’s Hospital. 

Sisters of Charity . 

General, except chronic and 
contagious. 

1848 

Yes. 

Yes. 

200 

17 

3 

14 

38 

3 

35 

North Ave? and Lake Drive. 




36 

Trinity Hospital. 

Milwaukee Medical College.. 

General, except infectious... 

1890 

Yes. 

Yes. 

80 

401 

1 

400 

34 


34 

200 Ninth St 



Oneida: 













37 

Church Hospital. 

Private organization (Epis- 

General, except contagious.. 

1894 

No. 

( 4 ) 

4 

0) 

1 

0) 

0) 

1 

0) 





copal). 










Oshkosh: 












38 

St. Mary’s Hospital. 

Sisters of the Sorrowful 

General. 

1891 

Yes. 

Yes. 

80 

10 


10 

30 


30 

Boyd and Merritt Sts. 

Mother. 






Racine: 













39 

St. Luke’s Hospital. 

Private corporation 

General, except contagious.. 

1872 

Yes. 

Yes. 

36 

12 


12 

4 


4 

1307 College Ave. 






40 

St. Mary’s Hospital. 

Franciscan Sisters. 

General. 

1883 

Yes. 

0) 

80 

0) 

0) 

0) 

20 


20 

1526 Grand Ave. 







Rhinelander: 













41 

St. Mary’s Hospital. 

Sisters of the Sorrowful 

General. 

<'1893 

No. 

Yes. 

33 

7 


7 

4 


4 

Prospect Ave. 

Mother. 









Sheboygan: 













42 

St. Nicholas Hospital. 

Hospital Sisters of St. Fran¬ 
cis. 

General, except contagious.. 

1890 

No. 

Yes. 

102 

0 ) 

(*) 

0) 

18 


18 

North Ninth'St. 



Stevens Point: 













43 

River Pines Sanatorium. 

Private organization . 

Tubercular. 

1906 

No. 

No. 

43 

2 

2 


3 


3 

Superior: 









44 

Isolation Hospital. 

City of Superior. 

Contagious... 

1895 

No. 

Yes. 

20 

1 

1 


2 

1 

1 

Dean Tract. 





45 

St. Francis Hospital. 

Sisters, Poor Handmaids of 

General, except contagious.. 

1889 

No. 

Yes. 

70 

10 


10 

10 

1 

9 

Stinson Ave. and Third St. 

Jesus Christ. 


46 

St. Mary’s Hospital. 

Sisters, Poor Handmaids of 
Jesus Christ. 

General, except contagious.. 

1893 

No. 

Yes. 

134 

30 


30 

24 

2 

22 

Clough Ave. 




Tomahawk: 













47 

Sacred Heart Hospital. 

Sisters of the Sorrowful 

General. 

1894 

No. 

No. 

41 

4 


4 

6 


6 



Mother. 









Wales: 













48 

Wisconsin State Tuberculosis San- 

State of Wisconsin. 

Tubercular. 

1906 

Yes. 

Yes. 

120 

2 

2 


9 

1 

8 

atorium. 








Wausau: 













49 

St. Mary’s Hospital. 

Sisters of the Divine Savior.. 

General, except contagious.. 

1905 

No. 

Yes. 

50 

0) 

0 ) 

0) 

15 


15 

Mercy St. 

. 


Wauwatosa: 













50 

Milwaukee Sanitarium. 

Private corporation. 

Mental and nervous. 

1884 

No. 

No. 

55 

3 

3 


54 

30 

24 

WYOMING. 







Cambria: 













1 

Cambria Hospital 5 . 

United Mine Workers of 

General. 

1891 

No. 

Yes. 

8 

1 

1 


1 

1 




America. 





Casper: 













2 

Wyoming General Hospital (Cas¬ 
per Branch). 3 

State of Wyoming. 

General. 

1911 























Cheyenne: 













3 

St. John’s Hospital. 

Private corporation 7 . 

General.. 

1885 

Yes. 

Yes. 

75 

13 


13 

13 


13 


Twenty-third, House, and 






Evans Sts. 














Fort Mackenzie: 













4 

U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1899 

( 8 ) 

Yes. 

42 

1 

1 


1 

3 1 



Fort D. A. Russell: 







5 

U. S. Army Post Hospital. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

1868 

( 8 ) 

Yes. 

120 

11 

11 


16 

« 15 

1 


Yellowstone' Park: 




6 

U. S. Army Post Hospital.. 

U. S. Government. 

General. 

0) 

( 8 ) 

Yes. 

14 

2 

2 


10 

9 10 



Fort Yellowstone. 








1 Not reported. 2 Factory employees. 3 Equipment. 4 Indians only. » Miners. 




























































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


365 


SANITARIUMS: 1910—Continued. 


PATIENTS TREATED 
DURING YEAR. 

PATIENTS REMAINING AT CLOSE 

OF YEAR. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Total. 

Male. 

Fe¬ 

male. 

Adults 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

403 

190 

213 

30 

11 

19 

24 

6 

632 

| 

G) 

G) 

54 

G) 

G) 


54 

540 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

670 

645 

25 

2 

2 


2 


1 

116 

83 

33 

4 

3 

1 

4 


355 ^ 

164 

191 

20 

12 

8 

2 

18 

2,356 

2,232 

124 

7 

7 


7 


277 

97 

180 

16 

7 

9 

13 

3 

1,691 

888 

803 

72 

38 

34 

68 

4 

81 

49 

32 

29 

13 

16 


29 

1,471 


1,471 

11 


11 

11 


177 

1 

176 

21 


21 

/ 18 

3 

504 

280 

224 

25 

14 

11 

25 

G) 

1,400 

500 

900 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

1,808 

G) 

G) 

76 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

1,590 

839 

751 

61 

35 

26 

57 

4 

349 

127 

222 






1,043 

447 

596 

46 

18 

28 

44 

2 

304 

96 

208 

9 

2 

7 

5 

4 

905 

552 

353 

41 

27 

14 

39 

2 

407 

342 

65 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

795 

347 

448 

70 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

96 

45 

51 

27 

17 

10 

27 


79 

49 

30 

3 

1 

2 


3 

648 

539 

109 

44 

28 

16 

44 


1,400 

1,001 

399 

80 

62 

18 

76 

4 

274 

205 

69 

11 

8 

3 

11 


298 

155 

143 

104 

55 

49 

104 


417 

193 

224 

14 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

204 

106 

98 

48 

24 

24 

48 


154 

154 


2 

2 


2 










840 

571 

269 

67 

50 

17 

60 

7 

325 

297 

28 

1 

1 


1 


956 

941 

15 

82 

81 

1 

82 


408 

408 


3 

3 


3 









RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 


Total. 


$11,174 

20,534 

( l ) 
6,400 
3,100 

( l ) 
20,000 
20,100 
42,471 

9,156 

3,878 

16,144 

15,951 

0 ) 

( l ) 

49,421 
400 

P) 

8,188 

P) 

P) 

0) 

25,000 

2,000 

15,564 

31,219 

8,490 

108,107 

16,800 

98,540 

7,486 


Derived from- 


Appro- 

pria- 

tions. 


Dona¬ 

tions. 


S15,480 


$3,000 

299 

20,000 


C 1 ) 


0 ) 


0) 

0) 


2,000 

2,313 

5,799 

P) 

97,231 


( l ) 


400 


( i ) 

S 

C 1 ) 

0) 

P) 


908 


688 

325 


0) 


7,4S6 


100 

20,000 


1,500 

33,712 

7,259 

1,671 

939 

6,546 

2,238 

1,442 

198 

7,221 

5,064 

3,859 

6,994 

8,957 



34,000 

G) 


Care of 
patients. 


$11,174 


0) 
6,400 
100 

P) 


P) 

36,524 


P) 

5,157 

0) 

P) 

P) 

25,000 


12,563 

25,095 

P) 

10,876 
13,420 
97,658 


Other 

sources. 


$5,054 

0) 


P) 

12,897 


P) 

2,123 

P) 

P) 

P) 


P) 


3,380 

882 


Total. 


$12,481 

19,677 
( l ) 
4,200 
3,000 

9,086 

20,203 

19,000 

42,339 

7,258 

4,333 

14,489 

9,597 

65,000 

P) 

49,421 
400 

P) 

10,032 

( l ) 

P) 

0) 

42,000 

2,000 

13,596 

31,136 

8,303 

108,107 

16,601 

83,805 

6,636 


For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 


$7,670 

19,677 

P) 

4,200 

3,000 

9,086 

20,203 

18,000 

35,570 

6,513 

2,886 
11,059 
9,597 
( l ) 

0 ) 

49,421 

400 

P) 

6,237 

P) 

P) 

P) 

21,000 

2,000 

11,489 

18,920 

0 ) 

68,107 

15,101 

83,144 

6,436 


YEAR. 

VALUE OF PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Institution number. II 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

In¬ 

vested 

funds. 

$4,811 

G) 

G) 

G) 

21 


$69,073 

$11,600 

$57,473 

22 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

23 


3 1,500 

3 1,500 


24 


G) 

G) 

G) 

25 





26 


1,420,000 

1,420,000 


27 

1,000 

35,000 

35,000 


28 

6,769 

415,000 

385,000 

30,000 

29 

745 

26,500 

13,500 

13,000 

30 

1,447 

1,000 


1,000 

31 

3,430 

83,000 

83,000 


32 


30,684 

15,489 

15,195 

33 

G) 

G) 

G) 


34 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

35 





36 


2,500 

2,500 


37 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

38 

3,795 

45,800 

43,000 

2,800 

39 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

40 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

41 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

42 

21,000 

38,000 

38,000 


43 





44 

2,107 

26,941 

26,941 


45 

12,216 

78,815 

78,815 


46 

G) 

30,000 

G) 

G) 

47 

40,000 

152,725 

152,725 


48 

1,500 

100,000 

100,000 


49 

661 

152,033 

147,793 

4,240 

30 

200 

200 

200 


1 





2 

3,000 

7 60,000 

60,000 


3 

G) 

G) 

G) 


4 

G) 

G) 

G) 


5 

G) 

G) 

G) 


6 


13,475 

P) 

P) 

P) 


3,000 

G) 

(*) 

0) 


10,475 

G) 

G) 

G) 


13,276 

G) 

G) 

G) 


10,276 

G) 

G) 

G) 


8 Not opened until 1911. 


7 Institution owned by county. 


8 Instruction for Hospital Corps. 


9 Enlisted men, Hospital Corps. 
























































































































































































Institution number. 


366 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 


Table V.—DISPENSARIES: 1910. 


NAME ANT) LOCATION. 


Supervised or conducted by— 


Class of cases treated. 


ALABAMA. 


Birmingham: 

1 H illman Hosp i tal D ispensary. 

F Ave. and Twentieth St. 


Hillman Hospital 


General, except contagious.... 


1 


1 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 
7 
S 


1 


• 1 

2 

3 

4 

5 


1 

2 

3 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 

13 


ARIZONA. 


Bisbee: 

Copper Queen Hospital Dispensary 


ARKANSAS. 

Texarkana: 

Cotton Belt Hospital Dispensary 3 . 
1404 Dudley Ave. 


Copper Queen Hospital 


Cotton Belt Hospital 


CALIFORNIA. 

Los Angeles: 

Bethlehem Free Dispensary. 

510 North Vignes St. 

Selwyn Emmett Grave’s Memorial Dispensary. 
737 North Broadway. 

San Francisco: 

Cooper Medical College Dispensary. 

Sacremento and Webster Sts. 

Hahnemann Medical College Dispensary. 

Maple and Sacremento Sts. 

Mount Zion Hospital Dispensary. 

2341 Sutter St. 

San Francisco Polyclinic Dispensary. 

443 Fillmore St. 

U. S. Army Post Dispensary. 

Presidio (Fort Mason). 

University Hospital Dispensary. 

Second and Parnassus Aves. 


Private organization. 

University of California. 

Cooper Medical College. 

Hahnemann Hospital. 

Mount Zion Hospital. 

San Francisco Polyclinic and Post 
Graduate Medical School. 

U. S. Government.. 

University of California Hospital. 


COLORADO. 


Denver: 

Tabernacle Free Dispensary. 

Twentieth and Lawrence Sts. 


Congregational Church 


CONNECTICUT. 

Bridgeport: 

Bridgeport Visiting Nurse Association Dis¬ 
pensary. 

398 Fairfield Ave. 

Hartford: 

City Dispensary. 

218 Pearl St. 

Hartford Dispensary. 

56 Winthrop St. 

Norwich: 

Wm. W. Backus Hospital Dispensary. 

26 Washington St. 

Waterbury: 

St. John’s Free Dispensary. 

37 Central Ave. 


Bridgeport Visiting Nurse Associa¬ 
tion. 


City of Hartford.... 
Private corporation 


Wm. W. Backus Hospital 


Waterbury Visiting Nurse Associa¬ 
tion. 


DELAWARE. 

Wilmington: 

Babies’ Hospital Dispensary. 

207 Washington St. 

Delaware State Tuberculosis Commission Dis¬ 
pensaries. 6 
602 West St. (office). 

Homeopathic Hospital Dispensary. 

1501 Van Buren St. 


St. Michael’s Hospital for Babies. 

Delaware State Tuberculosis Commis¬ 
sion. 

Homeopathic Hospital. 


DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA. 


Washington: 

Children’s Hospital Dispensary. 

Thirteenth and W Sts. NW. 

Columbia Hospital Dispensary. 

Twenty-fifthSt.and PennsylvaniaAve.NW. 
Episcopal Eye, Ear, and Throat Dispensary ... 
1147 Fifteenth St. NW. 

Freedmen’s Hospital Dispensary. 

Fifth and Bryant Sts. NW. 

George Washington University Hospital Dispen¬ 
sary. 

1333 H St. NW. 

Georgetown University Hospital Dispensary .. 
Thirty-fifth and N Sts. NW. 

Lutheran'Eye, Ear, and Throat Infirmary. 

Fourteenth and N Sts. NW. 

Ninteenlh Street Baptist Church Dispensary... 
Ninteenth and I Sts. NW. 

Providence Hospital Dispensary. 

Second and D Sts. SE. 

Sibley Memorial Hospital Dispensary. 

1150 North Capitol St. 

Tuberculosis Dispensary. 

923 IT St. NW. 

Woman’s Clinic Dispensary 3 . 

1237 T St. NW. 

Woman’s Dispensary. 

714 Four-and-a-half St. SW. 


Children’s Hospital. 

Columbia Hospital for Women and 
Lying-in Asylum. 

Episcopal Eye, Ear, and Throat Hos¬ 
pital. 

Freedmen’s Hospital. 

George Washington University Hospi¬ 
tal. 

Georgetown University Hospital_ 

Private organization (Lutheran). 

Ninteenth Street Baptist Church.. 

Providence Hospital.. 

Sibley Memorial Hospital. 

Association for Prevention of Tubercu¬ 
losis. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation.. 


General, except contagious_ 

General. 


General.'. 

General. 

General. 

General. 

General. 

General. 

General. 

General, except contagious 


General 


General. 

General, except contagious.... 
General. 

General. 

k 

General, except contagious ... 


General. 

Pulmonary tubercular. 

General, except contagious.... 


General. 

Gynecological and obstetrical.. 

Eye, ear, nose, and throat. 

General. 

General. 

General.. 

% 

Eye, ear, and throat. 

General. 

General. 

General, except chronic, con¬ 
tagious, and insane. 
Tubercular. 

General. 

General. 


Year 

found¬ 

ed. 

Colored 

patients 

received. 

Medical 
stall at 
close of 
year. 

Nurses 
at close 
of year. 

1888 

Yes. 

0) 

0) 

1903 . 

Yes. 

( J ) 

0) 

1887 

Yes. 

4 

10 

1S94 

Yes. 

3 

1 

1888 

Yes. 

39 

3 

1882 

Yes. 

50 

5 

0) 

Yes. 

5 


1903 

No. 

15 


1887 

Yes. 

49 

2 

1867 

(») 

1 


1863 

Yes. 

58 

1 

1886 

Yes. 

3 


1909 

Yes. 


2 

1880 

Yes. 

2 


1871 

Yes. 

23 

4 

0) 

0) 

1 


1Q03 

Yes. 


3 

1907 

Yes. 

2 

1 

1909 

Yes. 

11 

4 

1888 

Yes. 

21 

14 

1870 

Yes. 

10 

4 

1866 

Y es. 

6 

2 

1897 

Y es. 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

1865 

Yes. 

40 

7 

1821 

Yes. 

31 

( l ) 

1898 

Yes .... 

10 

0) 

1889 

Yes. 

6 


1907 

( 7 ) 

18 

3 

1861 

Yes. 

28 

60 

1890 

Yes. 


(2) 

1904 

Yes. 

9 

3 

1890 

Yes. 

4 


1883 

Yes. 

4 







1 Not reported. 

2 Included in report of hospital. 


3 Employees. St. Louis Southwestern Railway Co. 
* Fees of students. 



































































































































GENERAL TABLES. 

Table V.—DISPENSARIES: 1910. 


367 


PATIENTS 

TREATED DURING 
YEAR. 

RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 





Derived from— 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Total. 









Appropri- 

Dona- 

Care of 

Other 





at ions. 

tions. 

patients. 

sources. 

2,300 

1,100 

1,200 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 




35,777 

(') 

G) 

( 2 ) 

c 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

589 

589 


( 2 ) 




( 2 ) 

3,547 

0) 

0) 

(1) 

$300 

(>) 


7,000 

4,635 

2,365 

82,400 

2,400 



6,120 

3,427 

2,693 

20,369 


4 811,905 


$8,464 

0) 

0) 

(i) 

875 



$875 

2,349 

1,151 

1,198 

( j ) 


( s ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

4,200 

2,000 

2,200 

8,000 


5,000 

3,000 


i 1 ) 

o 

o) 

G) 

( 2 ) 


( i ) 


3,088 

1,544 

1,544 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

1,200 

500 

700 

200 


200 



78 

24 

54 

2,500 


2,500 



1,500 

900 

600 

950 

950 




4,474 


(i) 

2,477 


2,146 

331 


1,000 

G) 

(>) 

(>) 



( s ) 

G) 

1,736 

239 

1,497 

4,623 


4,367 

256 


0) 

g> 

(0 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

680 

316 

364 

10,000 

10,000 




701 

309 

392 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

2,454 

1,276 

1,178 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

1 064 


1,064 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


3,160 

(*) 

o) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

3 472 

1 733 

1,739 

( 2 ) 

(2) 




978 

565 

413 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


5,991 

2,743 

3,248 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

1,687 

G) 

o 

150 




150 

1,200 

200 

1,000 

G) 

G> 

G) 

G) 

G) 

4,113 

o 

0) 

G) 

( 2 ) 

G> 

C 1 ) 

G) 

536 

314 

222 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

363 

168 

195 

6,045 


6,016 


29 

2,206 

5 

2,201 

1,046 


59 

753 

234 

2,327 

347 

1,980 

745 

400 

345 




PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 


Total. 


0) 

(’) 

( 2 ) 


5 Includes reports of dispensaries at Milford, Dover, 
«Equipment. 


150 

0) 

0) 

( 2 ) 

5,628 
1,101 
727 

Smyrna, Harrington, Lewes, Seaford, and Georgetown, Delaware 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

$480 

3,500 

21,695 

532 

( 2 ) 

6,000 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

200 

1,900 

843 

1,954 

( 2 ) 

4,347 

( 2 ) 

10,000 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

0) 


I 


For 

running 

expenses. 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

$480 

3,500 

21,224 

532 

( 2 ) 

6,000 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

200 

1,900 

843 

1,954 


4,347 

( 2 ) 

10,000 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


For per¬ 
manent 
improve¬ 
ments. 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


$471 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


/ * 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


150 

0) 

0) 

( 2 ) 

5,628 

732 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


0) 


VALUE OF PROPERTY AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 


369 


Total. 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( l ) 

$40,000 
0) 

200 

( 2 ) 

40,000 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

60,000 


Land, 

buildings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

0) 

$40,000 

350,000 
200 

( 2 ) 

40,000 

( 2 ) 


60,000 


1,000 

( l ) 

18,500 

( 2 ) 

5,000 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

0) 

6 250 

0) 

0) 

( 2 ) 

6 250 
5,000 
6 300 


1,000 

( 2 ) 

16,000 

( 2 ) 

5,000 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


Invested 

funds. 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

0) 

«250 

0) 

0) 

( 2 ) 

6 250 
5,000 
6 300 


$500 


0) 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


C 1 ) 

2,500 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

G) 

0) 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 
G 

7 

8 


2 

3 

4 

5 

1 

2 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 

13 


7 Colored only, 
s Women and children. 


Institution number. 

































































































































































368 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table V. — DISPENSARIES: 1910—Continued. 


2 

a 

D 

O 

G 

o 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


GEORGIA. 


1 

2 

3 

4 


Atlanta: 

Anti-Tuberculosis Association Dispensary, 
708 Gould Building. 

Grady Memorial Hospital Dispensary. 

98 Butler St. 

Negro Clinic Dispensary No. 2. 

221J Auburn Ave. 

Augusta: 

Augusta City Dispensary. 

516 Sixth St. 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 
21 
22 

23 

24 

25 

26 

27 

28 

29 

30 


1 

2 

3 

4 


ILLINOIS. 

Bloomington: 

St. Joseph’s Hospital Dispensary. 

Jackson St. and Morris Ave. 

Chicago: 

Alexian Brothers’ Hospital Dispensary. 

1200 Belden Ave. 

American Medical Missionary College Dispensary 
828 Thirty-fifth Place. 

Bennett Medical College Dispensary. 

1358 Fulton St. 

Calumet Avenue Dispensary. 

2526 Calumet Ave. 

Central Free Dispensary. 

1744 West Harrison St. 

Chicago Lying-in Hospital Dispensary. 

1336 Newberry Ave. 

Chicago Pasteur Institute. 

812 Dearborn Ave. 

Children’s Memorial Hospital Dispensary. 

706 Fullerton ave. 

Children’s South Side Free Dispensary. 

6326 Jackson Park Ave. 

College of Medicine and Surgery Dispensary.... 
721 South Wood St. 

Hahnemann Hospital Free Dispensary. 

2815 Cottage Grdve Ave. 

Hering Medical College Dispensary. 

703 South Wood St. 

Illinois Charitable Eye and Ear Infirmary 
Dispensary. 

904 West Adams St. 

Illinois Post Graduate Medical School Dispensary 
1844 West Harrison St. 

Jenner Free Dispensary. 

223 West Washington St. 

Marcy Home Dispensary 8 . 

1335 Newberry Ave. 

North Star Dispensary. . 

157 West Superior St. 

Olivet Institute Dispensary. 

717 Vedder St. 

Post Graduate Hospital Dispensary. 

2400 Dearborn St. 

St. Joseph’s Hospital Dispensary. 

740 Garfield Ave. 

South Side Dispensary. 

2431 Dearborn St. 

Stock Yards Free Dental Dispensary. 

723 West Forty-seventh St. 

Wabash Avenue M. E. Church Dispensary. 

1401 Wabash Ave. 

Wabash Employees’ Dispensary. 

534 West Sixty-third St. 

West Side Free Dispensary. 

1012 Maxwell St. 

Danville: 

Wabash Employees’ Dispensary. 

The Temple. 

East St. Louis: 

East St. Louis Dispensary... 

City Hall. 

Murphysboro: 

St. Andrew’s Hospital Dispensary. 

Sixth and Mulberry Sts. 

Springfield: 

Wabash Employees’ Dispensary. 

Sixth St. and Capitol Ave. 

INDIANA. 

Fort Wayne: 

Wabash Employees’ Dispensary. 

339 Brackenridge St. 

Indianapolis: 

City and Bobb’s Free Dispensary. 

Market St. and Senate Ave. 

Lincoln Hospital Dispensary. 

1102 North Senate Ave. 

Terre Haute: 

Rose Dispensary. 

Seventh and Cherry Sts. 


Supervised or conducted by— 


Anti-Tuberculosis and Visiting Nurse 
Association. 

Grady Memorial Hospital. 

Anti-Tuberculosis and Visiting Nurse 
Association. 

University of Georgia. 


St. Joseph’s Hospital 


Alexian Brothers’ Hospital. 

American Medical Missionary College.. 

Layala University. 

Northwestern University. 

Rush Medical College. 

Chicago Lying-in Hospital. 

Private corporation... 

Children’s Memorial Hospital. 

Private organization.. 

College of Medicine and Surgery. . 

Hahnemann Hospital of the City of 
Chicago. 

Hering Medical College. 

Illinois Charitable Eye and Ear Infirm¬ 
ary. 

Illinois Post Graduate Medical School. 

Jenner Medical College. 

Woman’s Home Missionary Society, 
M. E. Church. 

Private corporation. 

Oh vet Institute. 

Post Graduate Hospital.... 

St. Joseph’s Hospital. 

Northwestern University. 

United Charities of Chicago and Chi¬ 
cago Dental Society. 

Wabash Avenue M. E. Church. 

Wabash Employees’ HospitalAssocia- 
tion. 

Associated Jewish Charities. 


Wabash Employees’ Hospital Associa¬ 
tion. 

County of St. Clair. 


St. Andrew’s Hospital 


Wabash Employees’ Hospital Associa¬ 
tion. 


Wabash Employees’ Hospital Associa¬ 
tion. 

City of Indianapolis and Indiana Uni¬ 
versity. 

Lincoln Hospital. 


Private corporation. 


Class of cases treated. 

Year 

found¬ 

ed. 

Colored 

patients 

received. 

Medical 
staff at 
close of 
year. 

Nurses 
at close 
of year. 

Tubercular.. 

1908 

No. 

7 

3 

General. 

1889 

Yes. 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes. 

(<) 

(<) 

General. 

1869 

Yes. 

30 

1 

General. 

1875 

Yes. 

20 

3 

General. 

1866 

Yes. 

3 

2 

General. 

1895 

Yes. 

1 

3 

General. 

1868 

Yes. 

32 

1 

General. 

1909 

Yes. 

17 

1 

General. 

1867 

Yes. 

120 

7 

Maternity. 

1895 

Yes. 

8 

4 

Hydrophobic. 

1890 

No. 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

General, except contagious.... 

1884 

Yes. 

7 

3 

General. 

1904 

Yes. 

5 

1 

General. 

1896 

Yes. 

12 

6 

General, except contagious.... 

1855 

Yes. 

72 

42 

General.... 

1892 

Yes. 

33 


Eye, ear, nose, and throat. 

1858 

Yes. 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

General. 

1907 

Yes. 

35 

1 

General. 

1S92 

Yes. 

60 

3 

General. 

1896 

Yes. 

4 

1 

General. 

1873 

Yes. 

6 


General, except contagious.... 

1902 

Yes. 

7 

1 

General. 

1888 

Yes. 

75 

( 3 ) 

General, except contagious.... 

1865 

Yes. 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

General. 

(2) 

Yes. 

41 

6 

Dental. 

1910 

Yes. 

53 

1 

General... . 

(2) 

Yes. 

3 


General. 

1884 

Yes. 

1 


General."... 

1907 

Yes. 

65 

8 

General. 

1884 

Yes. 

3 


General. 

1901 

Yes. 

1 


General, except contagious.... 

1897 

Yes. 


10 

General. 

1884 

Yes. 

1 


General. 

1S84 

Yes. 

1 


General. 

1909 

Yes. 

80 

3 

General. 

1909 

Yes. 

12 

8 

General. 

1878 

Yes. 

1 








1 Includes report of Negro Clinic Dispensary No. 2. 

1 Not reported. 

3 Included in report of hospital. 

^ Included in report of Anti-Tuberculosis Association Dispensary. 
6 Equipment. 

8 Supported by Bennett Medical College. 

































































































































































GENERAL TABLES. 

Table V.—DISPENSARIES: 1910—Continued. 


369 


PATIENTS TREATED DURING 
YEAR. 

RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 






Derived from— 


Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Total. 









Appropri- 

Dona- 

Care of 

Other 




% 

ations. 

tions. 

patients. 

sources. 

527 

219 

308 

i $4,889 


$4,889 



\ 

4,459 

2,640 

1,819 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 



259 

92 

167 

(4) 

0) 



(2) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

5,000 

$5,000 



500 

210 

290 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

(3) 


1,500 

1,200 

300 

( 3 ) 


( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( a ) 

6,152 

3,000 

3,152 

3,593 



$1,817 

$1.776 

5,000 

4,000 

1,000 

( 6 ) 



(6) 

516 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

200 




200 

14,667 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

5,993 


35 

4,471 

1,487 

2,600 


2,600 

( 3 ) 


( 3 ) 

1,070 

( 3 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

2,123 

1,143 

980 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

3,000 


3,000 



709 

252 

457 

92 


92 


6,320 

2,108 

4,212 

2,273 



2,773 


381 

163 

218 

( 7 ) 


( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

24,220 

11,120 

13,100 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

5 000 

(2) 

(*) 

4,700 



1,200 

3,500 

5,255 

4,221 

1,034 

17,000 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ; 

( 2 ) 

3,000 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

500 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

1,825 

1 225 

600 

1,500 




1,500 

451 

205 

246 

900 


650 

250 


11,781 

c 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 3 ) 


( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

8,110 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

( 3 ) 


( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

5,248 

(*) 

( 2 ) 

6,000 




6,000 

313 

115 

198 

266 


266 



( 3 > 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

..... 


5 800 

5,800 


( 9 ) 


( 9 ) 

( 9 ) 

( 9 ) 

(*) 

c 2 ) 

( 2 > 

21,621 


16,895 

4,726 

290 

290 


10 81,929 


» 80,445 

476 

1,008 

(*> 

( 2 ) 

c 2 ) 

6,600 

6,600 


(*) 

(’) 

< 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

3 394 

3 394 


( 9 ) 


( 9 ) 

( 9 ) 

( 9 ) 

4 800 

4 890 


( 9 ) 


( 9 ) 

( 9 ) 

( 9 ) 

A 4H9 

4 268 

2 134 

15 000 

12,000 

3,000 



101 

250 

250 


254 

104 

150 

13,769 




13,769 


YEAR. 

VALUE OF 

PROPERTY 
OF YEAR. 

AT CLOSE 

Institution number. || 

For per¬ 
manent 
improve¬ 
ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

buildings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

Invested 

funds. 





i 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


2 





3 


8 $2,000 

o $2,000 


4 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


1 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


2 

( 2 ) 

12,000 

12,000 


3 

$1,000 




4 

29.000 

29,000 




28,GOO 

$2S,600 

6 

9,672 

32,000 

32,000 

7 





8 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

9 





10 





11 

( 3 ) 




12 






( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 


13 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


14 


5,000 

5,000 


15 

20,000 

50,000 

. 50,000 


16 

150 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

17 


32,000 


32,000 

18 


(») 

( 3 ) 

19 

( 3 > 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


20 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


21 


37,352 

37,352 


22 

334 

6 500 

5 500 


23 

( 2 ) 

200,000 

200,000 


24 

( 9 ) 

( 9 ) 

( 9 ) 

( 9 ) 

25 


50,000 

50,000 


26 

4,219 

io 180,993 

150,000 

30,993 

27 

600 

o 1,200 

s 1,200 


28 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


29 

( 9 ) 

( 9 ) 

( 9 ) 

( 9 ) 

30 

( 9 ) 

( 9 ) 

( 9 ) 

( 9 ) 

1 


80,000 

80,000 


2 


( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


3 

1,315 

206,925 

100,000 

106,925 

4 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 


Total. 


1 $4,915 

( 3 ) 

(‘) 

5,147 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

3,593 

2,000 

3.200 
5,507 

17,789 

( 2 ) 

( 3 ) 

1.200 

142 

( 3 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 3 ) 

4,700 

35,000 

1,650 

1,300 

1,300 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

8,720 

364 

( 2 ) 

( 9 ) 

21,622 
m 97,271 
6,600 
( 2 ) 

( 9 ) 

( 9 ) 

15,000 

250 

9,759 


For 

running 

expenses. 


$4,915 

( 3 ) 

(«) 

5,147 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 2 ) 

1,000 

3.200 
5,507 
8,117 
( 2 ) 

( 3 ) 

1.200 
142 

( 3 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 3 ) 

4,700 

15,000 

1,500 

1,300 

1,300 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

8,720 
30 

( 2 ) 

( 9 ) 

21,622 
93,052 
6,000 
( 2 ) 

( 9 ) 

( 9 ) 

15,000 

250 

8,444 


7 Included in report of Chicago Homeopathic Hospital. * 

s Women and children. 

f Included in report of Wabash Employees’ Dispensary at Danville, Illinois. 

Includes finances for three hospitals and eleven dispensaries maintained by the \\ abash Employees Hospital Association. 
11 Contributions from railway employees. 


44153°—14-24 







































































































































Institution number, 


370 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table V.—DISPENSARIES: 1910-Continued. 


1 

2 

1 

1 

2 

3 

4 


1 

2 

3 

4 


1 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


IOWA. 

Des Moines: 

Drake Medical Dispensary. 

406 Center St. 

Iowa City: 

Homeopathic Hospital Dispensary 
Dubuque and Jefferson Sts. 

KANSAS. 


Topeka: 

Kansas Medical College Dispensary 
621 Quincy St. 

KENTUCKY. 


Lexington: 

Lexington Tuberculosis Dispensary 3 
618 West Main St. 

Louisville: 

Free Tuberculosis Dispensary.. 

121 West Chestnut St. 

Jewish Hospital Dispensary. 

531 South First St. 

Louisville City Hospital Dispensary. 
311 East Chestnut St. 

LOUISIANA. 


New Orleans: 

New Orleans Polyclinic Dispensary. 

Liberty St. and Tulane Ave. 

Touro Infirmary Dispensary. 

Prytania St. 

Tuberculosis Dispensary. 

1309 Tulane Ave. 

Woman’s Dispensary. 

1823 Annunciation St. 

MAINE. 

Portland: 

Portland Charitable Dispensary. 

55 India St. 

MARYLAND. 

Baltimore: 

Baltimore Eye, Ear, and Throat Charity Hos¬ 
pital Dispensary. 

625 West Franklin St. 

Baltimore General Dispensary. 

651 West Lexington St. 

City Medical Agency Dispensary (Northwest 
District). 

2242 Pennsylvania Ave. 

City Medical Agency Dispensary (Southern 
District). 

1418 Light St. 

Eastern Dispensary. 

1300 East Baltimore St. 

Evening Dispensary 5 . 

115 West Barre St. 

Hebrew Hospital Dispensary. 

East Monument St. 

Johns Hopkins Hospital Dispensary. 

East Monument St. 

Medical and Surgical Dispensary. 

1301 Light St. 

Mercy Hospital Dispensary .. 

Calvert and Saratoga Sts. 

Northeastern Dispensary. 

1224 East Monument St. 

Presbyterian Eye, Ear, and Throat Charity 
Hospital Dispensary. 

1007 East Baltimore St. 

Robert Garrett Hospital Dispensary. 

27 North Carey St. 

St. Agnes’ Hospital Dispensary. 

Wilkins Ave. (Station D). 

St. Joseph’s German Hospital Dispensary.. 

Caroline and Hoffman Sts. 

St. Luke’s Hospital Dispensary.. 

114 West North Ave. 

South Baltimore Eye, Ear, Nose, and Throat 
Charity Hospital Dispensary. 

1211 Light St. 

Southern Dispensary. 

106 West Hill St. 

Union Protestant Infirmary Dispensary 6 . 

1514 Division St. 

Oella: 

Oella Free Dispensary. 


Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of cases treated. 

Year 

found¬ 

ed. 

Colored 

patients 

received. 

Medical 
staff at 
close of 
year. 

Nurses 
at close 
of year. 

Drake University.. 

General. 

1903 

Yes. 

40 


Homeopathic Hospital.. . 

General. 

1887 

Yes. 

6 

14 

Kansas Medical College.. 

General. 

1890 

Yes. 

14 


Lexington Association for Prevention 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes. 

4 

1 

of Tuberculosis. 






Louisville Anti-Tuberculosis Associa- 

Tubercular. 

1907 

Yes. 

5 

5 

tion. 






Federation of Jewish Charities . 

General. 

1909 

No. 

14 

17 

Louisville City Hospital... 

General. 

1822 

Yes. 

8 

1 

Tulane University of Louisiana.. 

General, except eye, ear, nose, 

1888 

Yes. 

16 



and throat/ 





Touro Infirmary. 

General, except contagious.... 

1854 

Yes. 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

Louisiana Anti-Tuberculosis League 

Tubercular. 

1907 

Yes. 

10 

2 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1905 

Yes. 

12 

9 

Medical School of Maine. 

General. 

1904 

Yes. 

11 

2 

Baltimore Eye, Ear, and Throat Char- 

Eye, ear, nose, and throat. 

1SS2 

Yes. 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

ity Hospital. 






Private corporation. 

General, except major surgery, 

1803 

Yes. 

3 

1 


eye, and obstetrical. 





City of Baltimore. 

General. 

1904 

Yes. 

2 


City of Baltimore. 

General. 

1902 

Yes. 

2 


Private corporation. 

General. 

1815 

Yes. 

2 

1 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1892 

Yes. 

5 


Hebrew Hospital and Asylum (Hos- 

General, except contagious and 

1868 

Yes. 

27 

3 

pital Department). 

mental. 





Johns Hopkins Hospital. 

General. 

1873 

Yes. 

100 

7 

Private organization. 

General. 

1898 

No 

1 


Mercy Hospital. 

General. 

1875 

Yes . 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1852 

Yes.. 

12 

1 

Presbyterian Eye. Ear, and Throat 
Charity Hospital. 

Eye, ear, nose, and throat. 

1877 

Yes. 

22 

6 

Robert Garrett Hospital for Children.. 

General. 

lNXS 

Yes .... 

7 

1 

St. Agnes’ Hospital. 

General. 

1S63 

Yes 

4 

37 

St. Joseph’s German Hospital. 

General. 

1864 

Yes . 

12 

4 

St. Luke’s Hospital. 

General. 

1906 

Yes... 

( 2 ) 

( j ) 

South Baltimore Eye, Ear, Nose,and 

Eye, ear, nose, and throat. 

1901 

Yes. 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

Throat Charity Hospital. 






Private corporation. 

General, except contagious and 

1S45 

Yes. 

i 



obstetrical/ 





Union Protestant Infirmary. 

General, except contagious and 

1854 





insane. 





' Private organization. 

' General. 

1892 

Yes. 

2 

0) 


1 Not reported. 


2 Included in report of hospital. 


3 Opened August 1,1910; statistics for five months. 


i 





































































































































GENERAL TABLES. 

Table V.—DISPENSARIES: 1910—Continued. 


371 


PATIENTS TREATED DURING 
YEAR. 


Total. 


2,026 

0) 

506 


91 

798 
275 
14,479 


185 
24,783 
( l ) 

( l ) 

1,212 

5,509 

(!) 

1,323 

1,046 

20,000 

C 1 ) 

4,190 
0) 

1,200 

8,543 

8,823 

10,205 

0) 

274 

13,320 

925 

2,693 

3,679 


Male. 


Female. 


1,000 

296 


51 

326 

114 

9,234 


69 

11,500 

( l ) 

0) 

625 

2,232 

0) 

423 

700 

6,000 

0) 

1,374 

C 1 ) 

600 

0) 

3,550 
5,102 

0) 

132 

0) 

0) 

1,227 

0) 


1,026 

0) 

210 


40 

472 

161 

5,245 


116 

13,283 

<0 

0) 

587 

3,277 

0 ) 

900 

346 

14,000 

0 ) \ 

2,816 

0 ) 

600 

0) 

5,273 
5,103 

0) 

142 

0) 

0) 

1,466 

0) 


RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 


Total. 


S16,750 

( 2 ) 

« 


1,734 

5,000 

0) 

( 2 ) 


C 1 ) 

( 2 ) 

6,978 

6,484 

800 

( 2 ) 

3,421 

1,297 

1,322 

2,385 

900 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

0) 

( 2 ) 

2,775 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

807 


Derived from— 


Appropri¬ 

ations. 


$3,750 


1,192 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

1,500 

3,000 

250 

( 2 ) 

1,560 

1,297 

1,322 

1,185 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

2,175 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


500 


Dona¬ 

tions. 


SI2,000 


1,000 


116 

5,000 

0) 


( 2 ) 

5,478 

1,660 

550 

( 2 ) 


700 


( 2 ) 


300 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

p> 

( s ) 

p) 


Care of 
patients. 


( 2 ) 


$10 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


200 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

(>) 

< 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


Other 

sources. 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


$ 1,000 


P) 


426 


C 1 ) 

( 2 ) 


1,824 


( 2 ) 

1,861 


1,200 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

P) 


300 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


307 


Total. 


$46,750 

( 2 ) 

3,114 

1,043 

5,000 

4,896 

( 2 ) 

0) 

( 2 ) 

11,271 

9,538 

800 


( 2 ) 

3,571 

1,297 

1,322 

2,100 
1,800 
( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

0) 

( 2 ) 

2,790 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

719 


For 

running 

expenses. 


$16,750 
( 2 ) 

1,314 


884 

5,000 

4,896 

( 2 ) 


o 

( s > 

11,271 

9,538 

800 

( 2 ) 

3,571 

1,297 

1,322 

2,000 
1,800 
( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

P) 

( 2 ) 

2,790 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

719 


YEAR. 

VALUE OF 

PROPERTY AT CLOSE 

OF YEAR. 

| Institution number. | 

For per¬ 
manent 
improve¬ 
ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

buildings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

Invested 

funds. 

$30,000 

$131,000 

$100,000 

$31,000 

1 


o 

p) 

p) 

2 

1,800 

(«) 

P) 

p) 

i 

159 

4 159 

4 159 


1 





2 





3 


( 2 > 

( 2 ) 


4 



1 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


2 


10,000 

10,000 


3 


7,000 

7,000 


4 


4 500 

4 500 


1 


• 




( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


1 


44,766 

7,500 

37,260 

2 





3 





4 

100 

27,000 

7,000 

20,000 

5 


4,200 

4,200 


6 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

< 2 ) 

o 

7 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

.p> 

( s ) 

8 

(*) 

p) 

p) 


9 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 


10 


6,000 

6,000 


11 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

12 

( 2 ) 

p) 

( 2 ) 

p) 

13 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 


14 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

(*) 


15 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 > 


16 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


17 


400 

400 


18 





19 

P) 

p) 

(>) 

p> 

20 


0) 


p) P) p) 

4 Equipment 


0) 0) 0) I 0) 

6 Women and children. 


(0 0 ) 

6 Not in active operation in 1910. 

















































































































































372 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table V.—DISPENSARIES: 1910-Continued. 


J5 

a 

3 

B 

a 

o 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 

21 

22 

23 

24 

25 

26 

27 

28 

29 

30 

31 

32 

33 

34 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


MASSACHUSETTS. 

Boston: 

Bay State Dispensary. 

43 Charter St. 

Berkeley Infirmary Dispensary. 

44 Dwight St. 


Camev Hospital Disp 
Old Harbor and ] 


13 Burroughs Place. 

Boston Dispensary. 

25 Bennett St. 

' spensary_ 

Dorchester Sts. 

Denison House Dispensary. 

93 Tyler St. 

Frances JE. Willard Settlement Dispensary... 
38 Chambers St. 

Infants’ Hospital Dispensary. 

37 Blossom St. 

Jamaica Plain Dispensary. 

Centre St. (Jamaica Plain). 

Massachusetts General Hospital Dispensary.. 
Blossom St. 

Massachusetts Homeopathic Hospital Dispen¬ 
sary. 

750 Harrison Ave. 

Medical Mission Dispensary. 

36 Hull St. 

Mount Sinai Hospital Dispensary. 

17 Staniford St. 

New England Hospital Dispensary. 

29 Fayette St. 

Roxbury Homeopathic Dispensary. 

1224 Tremont St. (Roxbury Crossing). 

South End Dispensary. 

2A Milford St. 

Suffolk Dispensary. 

4 Charter St. 

Tremont Dispensary. 

1050 Columbus Ave. 

Brookline: 

Free Hospital for Women Dispensary. 

Pond Ave. 

Cambridge: 

Cambridge Anti-Tuberculosis Association Dis¬ 
pensary. 

689 Massachusetts Ave. 

Fall River: 

City Dispensary. 

Main St. 

Fitchburg: 

Free Tuberculosis Clinic... 

145 Main St. 

Haverhill: 

Haverhill Anti-Tuberculosis Association Dis¬ 
pensary. 

28 White St. 

Lowell: 

City Dispensary. 

City Hall. 

Corporation Hospital Dispensary. 

Merrimack and Pawtucket Sts. 

St. John’s Hospital Dispensary. 

Bartlett and Fayette Sts. ‘ 

Malden: 

Associated Charities Tuberculosis Dispensary.. 
15 Ferry St. 

Melrose: 

Melrose Hospital Dispensary. 

75 Myrtle St. 

New Bedford: 

City Mission Dispensary. 

755 First St. 

Pittsfield: 

House of Mercy Hospital Dispensary.. 

North St. 

Salem: 

Tuberculosis Dispensary. 

10 W ashington Square. 

Worcester: 

City Hospital Dispensary. 

162 Cnandler St. 

Memorial Hospital Dispensary. 

Belmont St. (Station A). 

Worcester County Charitable Eye and Ear In¬ 
firmary. 

Salem Square. 

MICHIGAN. 

Detroit: 

Children’s Free Hospital Clinic. 

Farnsworth St. 

City Tuberculosis Sanatorium Dispensary. 

233 Antoine St. 

Detroit Free Dispensary for Women and Chil¬ 
dren. 

Beaubien St. and Forest Ave. 
i Not reported. 


Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of cases treated. 

Year 

found¬ 

ed. 

Colored 

patients 

received. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1905 

Yes. 

Private corporation. 

General, except contagious.... 

1905 

Yes. 




Boston Consumptives’ Hospital. 

Consumption. 

1907 

Yes. 





Private corporation. 

General. 

1796 

Yes. 

Carney Hospital. 

General. 

1879 

Yes. 





Private organization. 

General. 

1907 

Yes. 

. Frances E. Willard Settlement. 

General. 

1908 

Yes. 

Infants’ Hospital. 

General. 

1881 

Yes. 

Private organization. 

General. 

1885 

Yes. 

Massachusetts General Hospital. 

General. 

1811 

Yes. 

Massachusetts Homeopathic Hospital. 

General. 

1857 

Yes. 

Woman’s nome Missionary Society, 

General, except contagious.... 

1894 

Yes. 

M. E. Church. 




Federated Jewish Charities. 

General, except contagious.... 

1901 

Yes. 

New England Hospital for Women 

General. 

1859 

Yes. 

and Children. 




Private corporation. 

General. 

1887 

Yes. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1893 

Yes. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1891 

Yes. 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1895 

Yes. 

Free Hospital for Women. 

G ynecological. 

1875 

Yes. 





Cambridge Anti-Tuberculosis Associ- 

Tubercular. 

1903 

Yes. 

ation. 




City of Fall River. 

General. 

1886 

Yes. 

Society for Control and Cure of Tuber- 

Tubercular. 

1909 

Yes. 

culosis. 

r 



Haverhill Anti-Tuberculosis Associa- 

Tubercular. 

1907 

Yes. 

tion. 




City of Lowell. 

General, except contagious 

1879 

Yes 

Corporation Hospital. 

General . 

1887 

Yes 

St. John’s Hospital. 

General. 

1867 

Yes 

Malden Tuberculosis Association. 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes 

Melrose Hospital. 

General . 

(i) 

Yes 

Ladies’ City Mission. 

General. 

1853 

Yes 

Pittsfield Anti-Tuberculosis Associa- 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes 

tion. 




Committee for Prevention of Tuber- 

Tubercular. 

1907 

Yes 

culosis. 




City Hospital. 

General. 

1890 

Yes 

Memorial Hospital. 

General. 

1871 

Yes 

Private organization. 

Eye, ear, nose, and throat 

1901 

Yes 

Children’s Free Hospital. 

General, except contagious 

1887 

Yes 

City Tuberculosis Sanatorium. 

Tubercular. 

1907 

Yes 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1893 

Yes 





Medical 
staff at 
close of 
year. 


( ! ) 


1 

24 
18 

100 

39 

2 

3 
8 
1 

51 

15 
50 

25 

4 
2 

16 
16 


14 

3 

9 

3 


10 

4 

( 2 ) 

3 

7 

3 

29 

23 

1 


13 

2 

9 


Nurses 
at close 
of year. 


1 

25 

10 

28 

1 


( 2 ) 


2 

12 

1 


(») 


( a ) 


( 2 ) 


! Included in report of hospital. 


3 Includes report of Tyler Street Hospital. 





























































































































































GENERAL TABLES. 

Table V.—DISPENSARIES: 1910—Continued. 


373 


RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 

PAYMEIs 


Derived from— 


Total. 





Total. 


Appropri- 

Dona- 

Care of 

Other 



ations. 

tions. 

patients. 

sources. 


$1,025 


$826 

$199 


$1,098 

2,605 


1,085 

810 

$710 

2,972 

(o 





( s ) 

3 44,812 


4,913 

17,538 

22,361 

3 46,304 

<*) 


o 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

(>> 


(>) 

40 

(*) 

0) 

52 



52 


18 

c) 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

( j ) 

( 2 ) 

1,660 

1,222 

$200 



1,022 

583 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

5,635 


2,800 

2,835 


5,635 

7,847 


5,093 

2,754 


8,293 



( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

2,003 


175 

417 

1,411 

1,657 

1,765 


1,069 

446 

250 

2,581 

3,644 


0) 

(>) 

0) 

4,063 

1,136 


55 

534 

547 

1,176 

(2) 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

0) 

3,988 


3,982 


6 

3,403 

7,543 

5 7,543 



7,543 

0) 



0) 

0) 




100 

4 100 

4,100 




4,100 

' ( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

c 2 ) 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

187 




187 

188 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

0) 

243 


180 

63 


278 

2 359 


2,359 



1,208 

qqh 

102 

228 



6 330 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

5,850 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

80 


63 

17 


80 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 




( 2 ) 

626 


229 

397 


588 







YEAR. 

VALUE OF 

PROPERTY AT CLOSE 

OF YEAR. 

| Institution number. | 

For per¬ 
manent 
improve¬ 
ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

buildings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

Invested 

funds. 





1 

$613 

$8,000 

$8,000 


2 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 


3 

8,681 

3 442,996 

150,000 

$292,996 

4 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

c 2 ) 

5 

0 ) 




6 




7 



< 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

8 


17,961 


17,961 

9 

( s ) 

< 2 ) 

o 

( 2 ) 

10 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

o 

( 2 > 

11 

50 

32,000 

32,000 


12 


4 1,000 

4 1,000 


13 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

14 

216 

1,063 

600 

463 

15 





16 


(«) 

0 ) 

(») 

17 


0 ) 


(i) 

18 

( i ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

19 


(*) 

(>) 

0 ) 

20 





21 





22 





23 


43,000 

4 3,000 


24 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


25 

( 2 ) 

(*> 

( 2 ) 


26 





27 

(*) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

28 


4 200 

4 200 


29 





30 





31 


75,000 

75,000 


32 

( 2 ) 

c 2 ) 

c 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

33 


50 

50 


34 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

1 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


2 


4 100 

4 100 


3 

6 Salaries 

of nurses not 

included. 




PATIENTS TREATED DURING 
YEAR. 


otal. 

Male. 

Female. 

0 

! 

1,741 

121 

1,620 

813 

(o 

0) 

2,536 

1,213 

1,323 

41,688 

19,463 

22,225 

15,084 

6,687 

8,397 

292 

(>) 

0) 

295 

15 

280 

(*) 

(>) 

(>) 

400 

200 

200 

22,302 

12,664 

9,638 

12,036 

4,287 

7,749 

0) 

o) 

o) 

0) 

(>) 

0) 

13,486 

0) 

0) 

1,765 

845 

920 

1,500 

800 

700 

10,950 

4,632 

6,318 

5,860 

980 

4,880 

983 


983 

214 

105 

109 

(>) 

(>) 

o 

108 

56 

52 

21 

10 

11 

4,505 

1,629 

2,876 

3,015 

1,963 

1,052 

« 

(*) 

(>) 

25 

15 

10 

91 

33 

58 

500 

200 

300 

42 

16 

26 

73 

33 

40 

4,302 

2,581 

1,721 

2,341 

780 

1,561 

103 

41 

62 

1,226 

0) 

(*) 

553 

338 

215 

2,917 

89 

2,828 


For 

running 

expenses. 


$1,098 

2,359 

( 2 ) 

37,623 

( 2 ) 

(0 

18 

1,660 

583 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

5,585 

8,293 

( 2 ) 

1,441 
2,581 
4,063 
1,176 

( 2 ) 

3,403 

7,543 

100 

4,100 

( ? ) 

( 2 ) 

188 

( 2 ) 

278 

1,208 

330 

5,850 

( 2 ) 

80 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


588 


i Equipment. 


5 Part of appropriation made to pauper department. 
























































































































































Institution number. 


374 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table V.— DISPENSARIES. 1910—Continued. 


4 

5 


6 


7 

8 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 
21 
22 

23 

24 

1 


1 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


Supervised or conducted by— 


MICHIGAN—Continued. 


Detroit— Continued. 

Wabash Employees’ Dispensary. 

17 Dearborn Road (Delray). 

Wabash Employees’ Dispensary. 

57 West Fort St. 

Grand Rapids: 

Anti-Tuberculosis Society Dispensary. 

23 Park St. 

Lake Linden: 

Calumet and Hecla Dispensary. 

Lake Superior General Hospital Dispensary 
Calumet and Beasley Sts. 


Wabash Employees’ Hospital Associa¬ 
tion. 

Wabash Employees’ Hospital Associa¬ 
tion. 

Grand Rapids Anti-Tuberculosis So¬ 
ciety. 

Calumet and Hecla Mining Co. 

Lake Superior General Hospital. 


MINNESOTA. 

Minneapolis: 

Asbury and Rebecca Deaconess Hospital Dis¬ 
pensary. 

Ninth St. and Ninth Ave. 

Minneapolis City Hospital Dispensary. 

Sixth St. and Seventh Ave., south. 

University Free Dispensary.. 

1808 Washington Ave., south. 

St. Paul: 

New Central Dispensary.. 

26 West Third St. 

St. Paul Free Dispensary. 

204 West Ninth St. 


Asbury and Rebecca Deaconess Hos¬ 
pital. 

Minneapolis City Hospital. 

University of Minnesota. 

St. Paul Anti-Tuberculosis Committee. 
Private corporation. 


MISSOURI. 

Kansas City: 

Post Graduate Hospital Dispensary... 

916 Independence Ave. 

Tuberculosis Dispensary. 

1115 Charlotte St. 

Wabash Employees’ Dispensary. 

1040 Union Ave. 

St. Joseph: 

City Dispensary.,. 

Seventh arid Wessame Sts: 

Ensworth Medical College Dispensary. 

Seventh and Jule Sts. 

St. Louis: 

Alexian Brothers’ Hospital Dispensary. 

3927 South Broadway. 

American Medical College Dispensary. 

3449 Pine St. 

City Dispensary. 

Eleventh and Market Sts. 

Evening Dispensary for Women 8 . 

1607 Wash St. 

Frisco Hospital Dispensary 9 . 

4960 Laclede Ave. 

Jewish Hospital Dispensary. 

913 Carr St. 

Mullanphy Hospital Dispensary. 

3213 Montgomery St. 

O’Fallon Dispensary. 

1806 Locust St. 

Physicians’ and Surgeons’ Dispensary. 

Jefferson Ave. and Gamble St. 

St. John’s Hospital Dispensary. 

2228 Locust St. 

St. Louis Children’s Hospital Dispensary. 

400 South Jefferson St. 

St. Louis Obstetric Hospital Dispensary. 

1020 North Eighteenth St. 

St. Louis Pasteur Institute Dispensary. 

3863 West Pine St. 

St. Louis University Dispensary. 

1402 South Grand Ave. 

Salvation Army Free Dispensary. 

401 Fullerton Building. 

Wabash Employees’ Dispensary. 

Title Guaranty Building. 

Washington University Hospital Dispensary... 
615 North Jefferson Ave. 

Springfield: 

Frisco Hospital Dispensary 9 . 

Stansberry: 

Wabash Employees’ Dispensary.. 

MONTANA. 

Anaconda: 

St. Ann’s Hospital Dispensary. 

Sixth and Oak Sts. 


Post Graduate Hospital. 

Kansas City General Hospital. 

Wabash Employees’ Hospital Associa¬ 
tion. 

City of St. Joseph. 

Ensworth Medical College. 

Alexian Brothers’ Hospital. 

American Hospital. 

City of St. Louis. 

Private corporation. 

Frisco Hospital. 

Jewish Hospital. 

Mullanphy Hospital. 

Washington University. 

St. Louis College of Physicians and 
Surgeons. 

St. John’s Hospital. 

St. Louis Children’s Hospital. 

St. Louis University. 

Private organization. 

St. Louis University. 

Salvation Army. 

Wabash Employees’ Hospital Associ- 
' ation. 

Washington University. 

Frisco Hospital.. 

Wabash Employees’ Hospital Associ¬ 
ation. 

St. Ann’s Hospital. 


NEBRASKA. 


Omaha: 

John A. Creighton Medical College Dispensary..' 
Fourteenth and Davenport Sts. 


Creighton University. 


Class of cases treated. 

Year 

found¬ 

ed. 

Colored 

patients 

received. 

Medical 
staff at 
close of 
year. 

Nurses 
at close 
of year. 

General . 

1884 

Yes. 

i 2 


General . 

1884 

Yes. 

( 3 ) 


Tubercular . 

1909 

Yes. 

15 

i 

General . 

1895 

No. 

2 


General, except contagious, 

1894 

Yes. 

5 

6 

infectious, and insane. 





General, except contagious.... 

1892 

Yes. 

10 

(*) 

General. 

1891 

Yes. 

7 

1 

General. 

1883 

Yes. 

35 

3 

Tubercular.. 

1908 

Yes. 

3 

1 

General . 

1896 

Yes .... 

12 

(«) 

General . 

1908 

Yes. 

30 

8 

Acute tubercular. 

1908 

Yes. 

1 

1 

General . 

1884 

Yes 

1 


General. 

1909 

Yes .... 

2 


General. 

1886 

Yes. ... 

25 

3 

General. 

1910 

Yes. 

7 

1 

General, except contagious.... 

1873 

Yes. 

9 

( 8 ) 

General. 

0) 

Yes. 

16 

3 

General. 

1893 

Yes.. .. 

6 

1 

General. 

1899 

No. 

1 

1 

General. 

1902 

Yes. 

17 

1 

General, except contagious.... 

1828 

No. 

( 6 ) 

( 5 ) 

General. 

1892 

Yes. 

39 


General. 

(i) 

Yes.. . 

28 

8 

General. 

1890 

No. 

22 


General. 

1879 

Yes.. .. 

(5) 

( 5 ) 

Obstetric. 

1904 

Yes. 

4 

1 

Pasteur treatment. 

1896 

Yes. 

2 


General. 

1892 

Yes.... 

26 

21 

General. 

1865 

No. 

1 

4 

General. 

1884 

Yes. 

1 


General. 

1872 

Yes. 

55 


General. 

1899 

No. 

1 

1 

General. 

1S84 

Yes. 

1 


General, except contagious.... 

1888 

Yes. 

( 5 ) 

( 5 ) 

General. 

1892 

Yes. 

42 








1 Includes report of Wabash Employees’ Dispensary, 57 West Fort St., Detroit, Mich. 

2 Included in report of Wabash Employees’ Dispensary, Danville, Ill.. 

8 Included in report of Wabash Employees’ Dispensary, 17 Dearborn Road, Detroit, Mich. 































































































































































GENERAL TABLES. 

Table V. — DISPENSARIES: 1910—Continued. 


375 


PATIENTS 

TREATED DURING 
YEAR. 


Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Total. 

i 796 

796 


( 2 > 

(*> 

( 3 ) 


c 2 ) 

243 

143 

100 

$800 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 > 

( 4 ) 

1,500 

1,000 

500 

3,455 

204 

55 

149 

( 5 ) 

13,224 

( 4 > 

( 4 > 

( 5 ) 

4,940 

o 

( 4 > 

8,266 

453 

229 

224 

824 

( 4 > 

( 4 > 

( 4 > 

2,700 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

5,015 

1,356 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 5 ) 

467 

467 


( 2 ) 

1,135 

832 

303 

« 

* 600 

450 

150 

( 4 ) 

874 

500 

374 

e> 

1,300 

700 

600 

( 6 > 

( 4 > 

( 4 ) 

< 4 ) 

78,608 

300 


300 

1,833 

1,100 

1,100 


(») 

3,000 

( 4 ) 

( 4 > 


1,346 

336 

1,010 


( 4 > 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

3,600 

5,234 

2,765 

2,469 

700 

3,460 

1,152 

2,308 

( 5 ) 

15,573 

( 4 > 

( 4 ) 

( 5 ) 

226 


226 

934 

93 

57 

36 

576 

2,865 

1,665 

1,200 

518 

593 

100 

493 

3,655 

8,600 

8,600 


( 2 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

8,500 

1,243 

1,243 


« 

1,109 

1,109 


( 2 > 

1,936 

( 4 ) 

( 4 > 

( 5 > 

5,780 

3,855 

1,925 

1,000 


RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 


Derived from— 


Appropri¬ 

ations. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
patients. 

Other 

sources. 


< 2 ) 

( 2 > 

$800 

( 4 ) 

c 2 ) 

( 2 > 

< 2 ) 

( s ) 







$3,455 

( 5 ) 

( 5 ) 

766 



( 5 ) 

( s ) 

( 5 ) 

$7,500 



824 

1,200 


1,500 




$5,015 

(•> 



o 

(») 

( 2 > 

( 4 > 



( 4 ) 

( 5 > 

(*> 



w 

(») 



78,608 


1,373 

( 5 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 8 ) 

452 

8 



( 5 ) 

( 5 ) 

3,600 

700 

( 5 ) 

( 3 ) 







( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

934 



<»> 




576 

518 






2,787 

( 2 ) 

868 

( 8 ) 


( 2 ) 

8,500 



(•> 

( 2 ) 



( 2 ) 

c 6 ) 

( s ) 

( 6 ) 

1,000 

« 





* Not reported. 

6 Included in report of hospital. 

6 Included in report of American Hospital. 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 


Total. 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


$747 


0) 

2,783 


( 5 ) 

1,370 

7,000 

824 

2,700 


4,331 

( 6 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 4 ) 

0) 

(») 

(•) 

71,212 

1,714 

( 5 ) 

2,471 

( 5 ) 

3,600 

400 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

934 

( 4 ) 

727 

3,655 

( 2 ) 

8,500 

( 5 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 3 ) 

1,200 


For 

running 

expenses. 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


$747 


( 4 ) 

2,783 


( 6 ) 

1,370 

7,000 

824 

2,700 


4,331 

( 4 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 3 ) 

(•) 

66,212 
1,714 
(•) 

2,471 

( 8 ) 

3,600 

400 

( 6 ) 

( 3 ) 

934 

( 4 ) 

727 

( 4 ) 

( 2 ) 

8,500 

( 6 ) 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 

900 


For per¬ 
manent 
improve¬ 
ments. 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


( s ) 


( 4 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 4 ) 


$5,000 


( 5 ) 


( 4 ) 

( 2 ) 


( 5 ) 

( 2 ) 


300 


VALUE OF PROPERTY AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 


Total. 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


( 4 ) 

$4,200 


( 5 ) 

( s ) 

55,000 


12,000 


( 5 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

7 15,000 
750 

C) 

( 8 ) 

( 5 ) 

( 6 ) 


Land, 

buildings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


0) 

$4,200 


(*) 

(*) 

55,000 


12,000 


( 5 ) 


( 5 ) 

( 5 ) 


600 

( 2 ) 

0) 

( 5 ) 

( 2 ) 

(*) 

250,000 


( 2 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 5 ) 

( 6 ) 

7 15,000 
7 150 
( 6 ) 

( 5 ) 

(•) 

( 5 ) 


( 5 ) 


Invested 

funds. 


600 

( 2 ) 

w 

. ( 5 ) 

( 2 ) 

(*) 

250,000 


7 Equipment, 
s Women and children. 
» Railway employees. 


< 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


( 6 ) 


( 2 ) 


( 4 ) 


$600 


( 5 ) 


( 5 ) 


(•> 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 


2 

3 

4 

5 

1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 
21 
22 

23 

24 













































































































































































Institution number. 


376 BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table V.—DISPENSARIES: 1910— Continued. 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


NEW JERSEY. 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 

9 

10 

11 


12 
• 13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 


1 

2 

3 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 


Atlantic City: 

Atlantic City Hospital Dispensary. 

26 South Ohio Ave. 

Barr Hygienic Institute Dispensary.... 

Virginia Ave. 

Bayonne: 

Bayonne Hospital Dispensary. 

12 East Thirtieth St. 

Camden: 

Camden City Dispensary. 

725 Federal St. 

Homeopathic Hospital Dispensary. 

430 Stevens St. 

Elizabeth: 

Elizabeth General Hospital Dispensary. 

East Jersey and Reid Sts. 

Jersey City: 

Christ Hospital Dispensary. 

176 Palisade Ave. 

Long Branch: 

Monmouth Memorial Hospital Dispensary.. 

Third Ave. 

Newark: 

Babies’ Hospital Milk Dispensary. 

439 High St. 

Home for Crippled Children Dispensary. 

190 Clifton Ave. 

Newark Charitable Eye and Ear Infirmary Dis¬ 
pensary. 

77 Central Ave. 

Newark City Dispensary. 

722 Broad St. 

St. James Hospital Dispensary. 

Jefferson St. 

St. Michael's Hospital Dispensary. 

High St. and Central Ave. 

Orange: 

East Orange Homeopathic Dispensary. 

23 Day St. 

Passaic: 

Free Dispensary. 

Municipal Building. 

Passaic General Hospital Dispensary. 

Lafayette Ave. 

Paterson: 

Miriam Bamert Dispensary «. 

164 Broadway. 

Paterson Eye and Ear Infirmary. 

169 Van Houten St. 

Paterson General Hospital Dispensary. 

Market St. and Madison Ave. 

NEW MEXICO. 


Albuquerque: 

Santa Fe Hospital Dispensary *. 

806 South Broadway. 

Gibson: 

Victor-American Fuel Company Hospital Dis¬ 
pensary. 7 
Heaton: 

Victor-American Fuel Company Hospital Dis¬ 
pensary. 7 


NEW YORK. 


Albany: 

Albany Hospital Dispensary. 

New Scotland Ave. 

St. Peter’s Hospital Dispensary... 
877 Broadway. 

South End Dispensary. 

Ash Grove and Trinity Places. 
Brooklyn: 8 
Buffalo: 

Buffalo Eye and Ear Infirmary... 
671 Michigan St. 

Emergency Hospital Dispensary.. 
108 Pine St. 

German Hospital Free Dispensary. 
736 Jefferson St. 

Good Samaritan Free Dispensary. 
24 High St. 

Tuberculosis Dispensary. 

165 Swan St. 

Wabash Employees’ Dispensary 6 . 
177 Dearborn St. 

Cohoes: 

Cohoes Hospital Dispensary. 

221 Main St. 

Tuberculosis Dispensarv. 

City Hall. 


Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of cases treated. 

Year 

found¬ 

ed. 

Colored 

patients 

received. 

Medical 
staff at 
close of 
year. 

Nurses 
at close 
of year. 

Atlantic City Hospital. 

General, except insane. 

1897 

Yes. 

1 

2 

Private individual.. 

Alcoholic. 

1908 

Yes. 

1 

1 

Bayonne Hospital. 

General, except contagious.... 

1888 

Yes. 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

Camden City Medical Society 

General.... _ 

1867 

Yes. 

14 


Homeopathic Hospital. ... 

General. 

1891 

Yes. 

15 

12 







Elizabeth General Hospital. 

General, except contagious.... 

1879 

Yes. 

23 

( 2 ) 

Christ Hospital. 

General. 

1873 

Yes. 

15 

1 

Monmouth Memorial Hospital . 

General. 

1889 

Yes. 

2 

1 

Babies’ Hospital. 

Nutritional and acute. 

1896 

Yes. 

7 

2 

Home for Crippled Children.. . 

Diseases of the bones and joints 

1892 

Yes. 

7 

6 

Newark Charitable Eye and Ear In- 

Eye, ear, nose, and throat. 

1880 

Yes. 

2 

7 

firmary. 






Newark City Hospital. 

General. 

1860 

Yes. 

26 

3 

St. James Hospital. 

General. 

1900 

Yes. 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

St. Michael’s Hospital. 

General. 

1867 - 

'Yes. 

28 

6 

East Orange Dispensary Association 

General. 

1884 

Yes. 

7 


City of Passaic. 

General. 

1907 

Yes. 

1 

• 

Passaic General Hospital. 

General. 

1S92 

Yes. 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1908 

Yes. 

15 

Private corporation. 

Eye, ear,nose, and throat... 

1883 

Yes. 

8 

1 

Paterson General Hospital. 

General. 

(i) 

Yes. 

18 

2 

Santa Fe Coast Line Hospital Associa- 

General_ 

1904 

Yes. 

5 

4 

tion. 






Victor-American Fuel Co. 

General. 

1902 

Yes. 

1 

1 

Victor-American Fuel Co. 

General. 

1902 

Yes. 

1 

1 

Albany Hospital. 

General. 

(i) 

Yes. 

15 

2 

St. Peter’s Hospital. 

General. 

1869 

Yes.... 

10 

2 

Albany City Free Dispensary Associa- 

General. 

1897 

Yes. 

33 

1 

tion. 






Private corporation. 

Eye and ear. 

1876 

Yes. 

8 


Emergency Hospital. 

General,except contagiousand 

1902 

Yes. 

10 

3 


insane. 





German Hospital. 

General,except contagious.. 

1S95 

Yes.... 

24 

( 2 ) 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1908 

Yes. 

40 

1 

Buffalo Association for Relief and Con- 

Tubercular. 

1907 

Yes. 

10 

4 

trol of Tuberculosis. 






Wabash Employees’ Hospital Asso- 

General. 

1S84 

Yes. 

1 


ciation. 






Cohoes Hospital. 

Eye, ear, nose, and throat .... 

1898 

Yes... 

4 

1 

Cohoes Committee for Prevention of 

Tubercular. 

1909 

No. 

6 

1 

Tuberculosis. 







7 Not reported. 

2 Included in report of hospital. 


3 Statistics for three months. 

* Name changed to Miriam Bamert Hospital after July, 1911. 




















































































































































GENERAL TABLES. 

Table V.—DISPENSARIES: 1910 -Continued 


377 


PATIENTS TREATED DURING 
YEaR. 

RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 

PAYMENTS DURING 

YEAR. 

VALUE OF 

PROPERTY 
OF YEAR. 

AT CLOSE 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Total. 

Derived from— 

Total. 

For 

running 

expenses. 

For per¬ 
manent 
improve¬ 
ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

buildings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

Invested 

funds. 

Appropri¬ 

ations. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
patients. 

Other 

sources. 

3,505 

0) 

0) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

< 2 ) 

( s ) 

(») 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


10 

8 

2 

$100 


$100 



$300 

$300 





2,104 

0) 

0) 

( 2 ) 

< 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

< 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

c 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

2,111 

895 

1,216 

4,474 

$3,000 

7 


$1,467 

4,394 

4,218 

$176 

$16,630 

$9,630 

$7,000 

0) 

0) 

0) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

1,848 

860 

9S8 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

< 2 ) 

c 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

0) 

(>) 

0) 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

c 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

0) 

0) 

< 2 > 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

1,035 

637 

398 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


1,955 

1,173 

782 

5,674 


1,128 

4,546 

5,629 

5,629 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


0) 

0) 

0) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

< 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

< 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

7,791 

4,364 

3,427 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

15,000 

9,000 

6,000 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 



( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


3,500 

3,500 


1,834 

(!) 

0) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

0) 

C 1 ) 


9,090 

4,629 

4,461 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


(i) 

( 2 ) 

0) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


(i) 

0) 

0) 

398 

11 

99 

288 

390 

390 

0) 

C 1 ) 

5,000 

3 87 

50 

37 

100 

100 




100 

100 


730 

487 

243 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

7 426 

3,126 

4,300 

4,642 


3,000 

$642 

1,000 

4,642 

3,000 

1,642 




1 586 

0) 

m 

1,850 

1,000 

850 


1,850 

1,850 


31,000 

30.000 

1,000 

1,550 

975 

\ / 

575 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

. ( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

900 

900 


(«) 


( ! ) 



( 8 ) 

0) 

C 1 ) 

(1) 

( 6 ) 

1 

(') 

(i) 

m 

m 

( 2 ) 



( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

m 

V / 

0) 

\ / 

(>) 

( 2 ) 


• 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 



( 2 ) 


\ ) 






880 

294 

586 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

< 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

1,302 

748 

554 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

< 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


1,933 

(*) 

o 

1,872 

1,250 

604 


18 

2,442 

2,442 


8,500 

8,500 


0) 

Q fill 

m 

m 

2 253 

2,250 

3 



2,249 

2,249 


1,281 


1,281 

3 119 

V ) 

702 

2 000 

2,000 




2,005 

1,854 

151 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

Of 014 

471 

300 

171 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

C 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 


723 

323 

400 

1,577 

500 

1,077 



810 

810 













813 

m 

AXfl 

363 

2 240 




2,240 

2,240 

2,240 





‘tOKJ 

m 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

(=) 

( 2 ) 

\ J 

0) 

\ / 

0) 

(*) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


32 

1A 

16 

907 


682 

225 


589 

589 





10 










2 

s 

3 

o 


4 

5 

6 

7 

8 

9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 

9 

10 
11 


& Railway employees. 

6 Included in report of Santa Fe Hospital, Los Angeles, Cal. 


8 See New 


ployees s 
York Ci 


City. 



































































































378 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table V _ DISPENSARIES: 1910—Continued. 


Si 

a 

a 

a 

a 

o 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


Supervised or conducted by— 


NEW YORK—Continued. 


12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 
21 
22 

23 

24 

25 

26 

27 

28 

29 

30 

31 

32 

33 

34 

35 

36 

37 

38 

39 

40 

41 

42 

43 

44 

45 

46 

47 

48 

49 

50 

51 


Liberty: 

Loomis Sanatorium Dispensary. 

Loomis P. O. 

Mount Vernon: 

Mount Vernon Hospital Dispensary. 

North Seventh Ave. 

New York City: 

Bronx and Manhattan Boroughs — 

Amity Dispensary and Jones Memorial Clinic... 
312 West Fifty-fourth St. 

Beachonian Dispensary. 

183 Ludiow St. 

Bellevue Hospital Dispensary... 

Twenty-sixth St. and First Ave. 

Bellevue Hospital Tuberculosis Clinic. 

Twenty-sixth St. and First Ave. (Boat 
Southfield). 

Beth Israel Hospital Dispensary. 

66 Jefferson St. 

Bloomingdale Clinic. 

225 West Ninety-ninth St. 

Bronx Eye and Ear Infirmary. 

404 East One hundred and forty-second St. 

Bronx Northern Tuberculosis Clinic. 

St. Paul Place and Third Ave. 

Bronx Southern Tuberculosis Clinic. 

493 East One hundred and thirty-ninth St. 

Calvary M. E. Church Dispensary. 

211 West One hundred and twenty-ninth St. 
Columbus Hospital Dispensary. 

226 East Twentieth St. 

Cornell University Medical College Dispensary.. 
463 First Ave. 

Demilt Dispensary. 

245 East Twenty-third St. 

Dispensary of Hospital for the Ruptured and 

Crippled. 

135 East Forty-second St. 

East Side Clinic for Women and Children. 

246 East Eighty-third St. 

East Side Tuberculosis Clinic. 

81 East Second St. 

Eclectic College Free Dispensary. 

239 East Fourteenth St. 

Fordham Hospital Dispensary. 

Crotona A ve. and Southern Boulevard. 

French Hospital Dispensary. 

450 West Thirty-fourth St. 

General Memorial Hospital Dispensary. 

One hundred and sixth St. and Central 
Park, west. 

German Hospital Dispensary. 

Seventy-sixth St. and Park Ave. 

German Polyclinic. 

137 Second Ave. 

Good Samaritan Dispensary. 

75 Essex St. 

Gouvemeur Hospital Dispensary. 

Gouvemeur and Water Sts. 

Gouvemeur Hospital Tuberculosis Dispensary. 
Twenty-sixth St. and First Ave. (Boat 
Westfield). 

Har Moriah Hospital Dispensary. 

138 Second St. 

Harlem Dispensary. 

108 East One hundred and twenty-eighth St. 

Harlem Hospital Dispensary. 

One hundred and thirty-sixth St. and 
Lenox Ave. 

Harlem Italian Tuberculosis Clinic. 

339 East One hundred and ninth St. 

House of Relief Dispensary. 

67 Hudson St. 

Italian Hospital Dispensary. 

171 West Houston St. 

J. Hood Wright Memorial Hospital Dispensary. 
503 West One hundred and thirty-first St. 

Jewish Hospital Dispensary. 

1915 Madison Ave. 

Lebanon Hospital Dispensary. 

Westchester and Caldwell Aves. 

Lincoln Hospital and Home Dispensary. 

East One hundred and forty-first St. and 
Southern Boulevard. 

Manhattan Eye, Ear, and Throat Hospital Dis¬ 
pensary. 

210 East Sixty-fourth St. 

Metropolitan Throat Hospital Dispensary. 

351 West Thirty-fourth St. 

Mount Sinai Hospital Dispensary. 

Madison Ave. and one hundredth St. 


Loomis Sanatorium... 

Mount Vernon Hospital. 

Amity Baptist Church. 

Private corporation. 

Bellevue Hospital. 

Bellevue Hospital. 

Beth Israel Hospital. 

St. Michael’s Protestant Episcopal 
Church. 

Private corporation. 

City of New York. 

City of New York. 

Calvary M. E. Church. 

Columbus Hospital. 

Cornell University. 

Private corporation. 

Hospital for Ruptured and Crippled... 

East Side Clinic for Children Society... 

City of New York. 

Eclectic Medical College. 

Fordham Hospital. 

French Hospital. 

General Memorial Hospital. 

German Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Gouvemeur Hospital. 

Gouvemeur Hospital. 

Har Moriah Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

Harlem Hospital. 

City of New York. 

House of Relief. 

Italian Hospital. 

J. Hood Wright Memorial Hospital... 

Jewish Hospital for Deformities and 
Joint Diseases. 

Lebanon Hospital. 

Lincoln Hospital and Home. 

Manhattan Eye, Ear, and Throat Hos¬ 
pital. 

Private corporation. 

Mount Sinai Hospital of City of New 
York. 


Class of cases treated. 

Year 

found¬ 

ed. 

Colored 

patients 

received. 

Medical 
staff at 
close of 
year. 

Nurses 
at close 
of year. 

General. 

1905 

No. 

1 

1 

General.. . 

1890 

Yes. 

12 

1 

Nose and throat. 

1884 

Yes. 

7 

2 

General. 

1902 

Yes. 

10 

1 

General. 

(i) 

Yes. 

64 

8 

Tubercular. 

( l ) 

Yes. 

64 

2 

General. 

1890 

Yes. 

65 

3 

General. 

1891 

Yes. 

7 

1 

Eye, ear, nose, and throat. 

1902 

Yes. 

15 

1 

Pulmonary tubercular. 

1907 

Yes. 

4 

1 

Pulmonary tubercular. 

1910 

Yes. 

3 

1 

General. 

1894 

Yes. 

9 

1 

General, except contagious.... 

1895 

Yes. 

14 

3 

General, except contagious.... 

1898 

Yes. 

75 

5 

General. 

1851 

Yes. 

44 

1 

Ruptured and crippled. 

1864 

Yes. 

25 

6 

General. 

1906 

Yes. 

7 


Pulmonary tubercular. 

1910 

Yes. 

10 

2 

General. 

1865 

Yes. 

22 

4 

General. 

1892 

Yes.... 

21 

2 

General. 

1809 

Yes. 

7 

3 

Surgical. 

1884 

Yes. 

2 

2 

General. 

1857 

Yes. 

90 

8 

General, except contagious.... 

1883 

Yes. 

55 

2 

General. 

1848 

Yes. 

22 

8 

General, except contagious.... 

1885 

Yes. 

60 

4 

Tubercular. 

(i) 

Yes. 

6 

3 

General. 

1909 

Yes.... 

24 

( 3 ) 

General, except contagious.... 

1868 

Yes. 

11 

General. 

1879 

Yes. 

62 

2 

Pulmonary tubercular. 

1910 

Yes. 

2 

1 

General. 

1875 

Yes. 

5 

2 

General. 

1904 

Yes. 

15 

2 

General. 

1862 

Yes. 

9 

2 

Deformity and orthopedic .... 

1905 

Yes. 

15 

26 

General, except contagious.... 

1890 

Yes. 

31 

3 

General. 

1839 

Yes. 

9 

6 

Eye, ear, nose, and throat. 

1869 

Yes. 

( 8 ) 

( 3 ) 

Throat, nose, and ear. 

1873 

Yes... 

10 

1 

General. 

1853 

Yes. 

183 

10 


1 Not reported. 

2 Included in report of sanatorium. 

3 Included in report of hospital. 


4 Exclusive of 4,661 children, sex not reported. 

3 Included in appropriation for Department of Bellevue and Allied Hospitals. 
3 Equipment. 
































































































































































GENERAL TABLES. 

Table V. — DISPENSARIES: 1910—Continued. 


379 


PATIENTS TREATED DURING 
YEAR. 

RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 




1 


Derived from— 


Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Total. 









Appropri- 

Dona- 

Care of 

Other 





ations. 

tions. 

patients. 

sources. 

• 0) 

0) 

( l ) 

( 2 ) 


( s ) 

( 2 ) 

(*) 

717 

417 

300 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( s ) 

411 

185 

226 

$407 


$250 

$157 


0) 

(*) 

0) 

3,100 


1,100 

2,000 


<24,604 

16,898 

7.706 

( 5 ) 

( 5 ) 


447 

298 

149 

( s ) 

( 4 ) 


- 


43,228 

21,828 

21,400 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

3,587 

(!) 

(i) 

513 



341 

$172 

3,586 

' 1,586 

2,000 

2,009 


262 

797 

950 

874 

(i) 

(i) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 




829 

(i) 

(*) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 




5,613 

448 

5,165 

2,043 

1,337 

706 


6,191 

3,678 

2,513 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

23,015 

15,129 

7,886 

22,000 


17,250 

4,750 


15,326 

5,966 

9,360 

10,601 


20 


10 581 

50,767 

27,876 

22,891 

( s ) 

( s ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

2,673 

(l) 

(i) 

2,746 


1,444 

1,302 


2,907 

(>) 

( l ) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 


1,805 

742 

1,063 

902 


290 


612 

10,182 

4,073 

6,109 

(5) 

(5) 




4,984 

2,520 

2,464 

( 3 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

474 

145 

329 

( 3 ) 


( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

32,845 

16,286 

16,559 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

37,865 

16,520 

21,345 

15,905 

$250 

1,250 

9,287 

5,118 

85,769 

44,407 

41,362 

27,283 



17,581 

9,702 

57,584 

22,523 

35,061 

(6) 

(6) 


357 

229 

128 

( 5 ) 

(S) 




9,829 

4,915 

4,914 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

5,182 

0) 

0) 

2,160 

250 

482 


1,428 

37 779 

20 139 

17,640 

( 5 ) 

(5) 




904 

0) 

(>) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 




56,802 

o 

(>) 

( 8 ) 


( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 

.(*) 

7,459 

• 4,898 

2,561 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

0) 

(>) 

(>) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

2,054 

858 

1,196 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

0) 

0) 

<■» 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

33,119 

( l ) 

( l ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

1 641 

855 

786 

1,914 


695 


1,219 

45,500 

21,000 

24,500 

( 3 ) 


( 3 ) 

11,966 

( 3 ) 


PAYMENTS DURING 

YEAR. 

VALUE OF 

PROPERTY AT CLOSE 

OF YEAR. 

Institution number. 

Total. 

For 

running 

expenses. 

For per¬ 
manent 
improve¬ 
ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

buildings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

Invested 

funds. 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

12 

( 3 ) 

( 3 > 


( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


13 

$1,397 

$1,147 

$250 


14 

3,100 

3,100 


( l ) 

C 1 ) 

(0 

15 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


16 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


17 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


18 

534 

534 


8 $100 

6 $100 


19 

1 910 

1 752 

158 




20 

o 

( 7 > 

( 7 ) 




21 

c 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

o 




22 

2,102 

2,102 





23 

( 3 ) 

m 


( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


24 

22,000 

22,000 



25 

15,492 

15,492 


380,000 

350,000 

$30,000 

26 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

27 

3,432 

3.432 





28 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 




29 

902 

902 


60,000 

60,000 


30 

( 8 ) 

c) 


( 3 ) 

(3) 


31 

( 3 ) 

( s ) 


( 3 ) 

(3) 


32 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 > 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

33 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

34 

10,204 

10.204 


88,000 

88,000 


35 

28,379 

27,879 

500 

278,000 

85,000 

193,000 

oQ 

( 3 ) 

( 3 1 


( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


37 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


38 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


( 3 ) 

O 

39 

2,233 

2,233 


32,622 

30,000 

2,622 

40 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


( 3 ^ 

( 3 ) 


41 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 


42 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 


(«) 

( 8 ) 


43 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

44 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

45 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


46 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


47 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

(») 

( 3 ) 

<*) 

48 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

49 

2,215 

2,215 


28,000 

15,000 

13,000 

50 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

90,000 

( 3 ) 

275,000 

( 3 ) 

51 


7 Not reported. Included in general fund, Department of Health. 

8 The House of Relief and its dispensary are supported from the general fund of the Society of the New York Hospital. Finances reported under House of Relief 
include this dispensary. 

































































































































Institution number. 


380 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table V.—DISPENSARIES: 1910—Continued. 


Year 

found¬ 

ed. 

Colored 

patients 

received. 

Medical 
staff at 
close of 
year. 

Nurses 
at close 
of year. 

1790 

Yes. 

16 

3 

1890 

Yes.. 

8 


1820 

Yes. 

85 

20 

1771 

Yes. 

37 

3 

1853 

Yes. 

23 

4 

1863 

Yes. 

12 

2 

1869 

Yes. 

24 

2 

1852 

Yes. 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

1866 

Yes. 

15 

4 

1881 

Yes. 

174 

9 

1882 

Yes. 

245 

6 

1891 

Yes. 

81 

5 

1862 

Yes.. 

10 


1827 

Ye^-..... 

9 

2 

1852 

Yes.. 

36 


1868 

Yes. 

48 

5 

1881 

Yes. 

39 

5 

1902 

Yes. 

60 

7 

1850 

Yes. 

32 

3 

1890 

Yes. 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

1901 

Yes. 

20 

6 

1880 

Yes. 

1 

1 

1887 

Yes. 

121 

S 

1905 

Yes. 

32 

5 

1905 

Yes. 

9 

1 

1872 

Yes. 

50 

5 

1904 

Yes. 

13 

3 

1894 

Yes. 

12 

2 

1855 

Yes. 

24 

1 



4 


1898 

Yes. 

20 

5 

1881 

Yes.. 

7 


1902 

Yes. 

2 

2 

1910 

Yes. 

1 

1 

1910 

Yes. 

7 

1 

1855 

Yes. 

4 


1846 

Yes. 

14 

4 

1906 

Yes. 

14 





2 

1878 

Yes. 

28 

1 

1883 

Yes. 

8 

1 

1910 

Yes. 

(i) 

( 4 ) 

1902 

Yes. 

3 

2 

1895 

Yes. 

35 

1 

1867 

Yes. 

3 


ospital. 

Finances 

here given 

are for the 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


NEW YORK—Continued. 

New York City—C ontinued. 

Bronx and Manhattan Boroughs— Continued. 

52 New York Dispensary. 

145 Worth St. 

53 New York Eye and Eat Clinic. 

324 East Third St. 

54 New York Eye and Ear Infirmary Dispensary. 
205 East Thirteenth St. 

55 New York Hospital Dispensary. 

8 West Sixteenth St. 

56 New York Infirmary Dispensary. 

1 Livingston Place. 

57 New York Medical College Hospital Dispensary. 
19 West One hundred and first St. 

58 New York Ophthalmic and Aural Institute Dis¬ 
pensary. 

46 East Twelfth St. 

59 New York Ophthalmic Hospital Dispensary... 
201 East Twenty-third St. 

60 New York Orthopedic Dispensary. 

126 East Filty-ninth St. 

6 1 New York Polyclinic Medical School and Hos¬ 
pital Dispensary. 

214 East Thirty-fourth St. 

62 New York Post Graduate Medical School Hos¬ 
pital Dispensary. 

303 East Twentieth St. 

63 New York Throat, Nose, and Lung Hospital 
Dispensary. 

231 East Fifty-seventh St. 

64 Northeastem Dispensary.. 

222 East Fifty-ninth St. 

65 Northern Dispensary.. 

165 Waverly Place. 

66 Northwestern Dispensary. 

Thirty-sixth St. and Ninth Ave. 

67 Presbyterian Hospital Dispensary. 

Madison Ave. and Seventieth St. 

68 Roosevelt Hospital Dispensary. 

Fifty-ninth St. and Ninth Ave. 

69 St. Bartholomew’s Clinic. 

215 East Forty-second St. 

70 St. Luke’s Hospital Dispensary. 

One hundred and thirteenth St. and Am¬ 
sterdam Ave. 

71 St. Mark’s Hospital Dispensary. 

179 Second Ave. 

72 St. Vincent’s Hospital Dispensary.. ^. 

I Seventh Ave. 

73 Trinity Dispensary. 

209 Fulton St. 

74 Vanderbilt Clinic. 

II Amsterdam Ave. 

75 Volunteer Hospital Dispensary. 

93 Gold St. 

76 Washington Heights Hospital Dispensary. 

552 West One hundred and sixty-fifth St. 

77 West Side German Dispensary. 

328 West Forty-second St. 

78 West Side Tuberculosis Clinic. 

307 West Thirty-third St. 

79 Wilkes Dispensary. 

435 Ninth Ave. 

80 Woman’s Hospital Dispensary. 

141 West One hundred and ninth St. 
Brooklyn Borough — 

81 Bay Ridge Hospital Dispensary. 

Second Ave. and Sixtieth St. 

82 Bedford Dispensary and Hospital. 

343 Ralph Ave. 

83 Bradford Street Hospital Dispensary. 

109 Bradford St. 

84 Brooklyn Boat Tuberculosis Clinic. 

Foot of North Second St. 

85 Brooklyn Brownsville Tuberculosis Clinic. 

362 Bradford St. 

86 Brooklyn Central Dispensary. 

29 Third Ave. 

87 Brooklyn City Dispensary. 

11 Tillary St. 

88 Brooklyn Main Tuberculosis Clinic. 

Fleet and W illoughby Sts. 

89 Bustywiek and East Brooklyn Dispensary. 

1097 Myrtle Ave. 

90 Central Homeopathic Dispensary. 

15 Columbus Place. 

91 Coney Island Hospital Dispensary. 

Ocean Parkway and Avenue Y. 

92 Cumberland Street Hospital Dispensary. 

109 Cumberland St. 

93 East New York Dispensary. 

131 Watkins St. 

94 Gates Avenue Homeopathic Dispensary. 

13 Gates Ave. 

1 Not reported. 

2 Included in report of infirmary. 

3 The New York Hospital and its dispensary are 
dispensary alone. 


Supervised or conducted by— 


Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

New York Eye and Ear Infirmary 
New York Hospital. 


New York Infirmary for Women and 
Children. 

New York Medical College and Hospi¬ 
tal for Women. 

New York Ophthalmic and Aural In¬ 
stitute. 


New York Ophthalmic Hospital. 
New York Orthopedic Hospital.. 


New York Polyclinic Medical School 
and Hospital. 

New York Post Graduate Medical 
School and Hospital. 

New York Throat, Nose, and Lung 
Hospital. 


Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Presbyterian Hospital. 

Roosevelt Hospital. 

St. Bartholomew’s Church. 
St. Luke’s Hospital. 


St. Mark’s Hospital. 

St. Vincent’s Hospital. 

Trinity Church Association. 

Columbia College. 

Volunteer Hospital. 

Washington Heights Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

City of New York. 

St. Mary’s Free Hospital for Children. 
Woman’s Hospital. 


Class of cases treated. 


Private corporation. 

Private corporation.. 

Bradford Street Hospital_ 

City of New York. 

City of New York.. 

Private corporation.. 

Private corporation.. 

City of New York.. 

Private corporation.. 

Private corporation.. 

Coney Island Hospital. 

Cumberland Street Hospital. 

Private corporation.. 

Private corporation. 


General. 

General. 

Acute eye and ear. 

General. 

General, except contagious... 

General. 

General. 


Eye, ear, nose, and throat. 

Orthopedic. 

General. 


General, except chronic and 
contagious. 

Throat, nose, eye, ear, teeth, 
heart, and lungs. 


General. 
General. 
General. 
General. 
General. 
General. 
General. 


General.. 

General.. 

General. 

General, except contagious.... 

General. 

General. 

General. 

Pulmonary tubercular... 

General... 

Gynecological and obstetrical.. 

General. 

General. 

General, except contagious... 

Pulmonary tubercular. 

Pulmonary tubercular. 

General. 


General, except infectious and 
tubercular. 

Pulmonary tubercular. 


General. 
General. 
General. 
General. 
General. 
General. 




















































































































































































GENERAL TABLES. 

Table V.—DISPENSARIES: 1910 -Continued. 


381 


PATIENTS TREATED DURING 
YEAR. 

RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 






Derived from— 


Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Total. 









Appropri- 

Dona- 

Care of 

Other 





ations. 

tions. 

patients. 

sources. 

125,366 

o) 

0) 

$24,357 


$3,2% 

$12,210 

$8,851 

9,240 

( l ) 

0) 

2,473 



1,691 

782 

<*) 

(») 

(>) 

<*> 

o 

<*> 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

17,690 

10,000 

7,690 

3 7,700 


c 3 ) 

3 7,700 

( 3 > 

9,817 


9,817 

(*> 

o 

c) 

( 2 > 

( s ) 

845 

265 

580 

0) 


( 4 ) 

< 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

14,588 

5,835 

8,753 

0) 

( 4 ) 

• o 

( 4 ) . 

( 4 ) 

1,269 

734 

535 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

4,996 

2,848 

2,148 

(<) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 > 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

13,890 

8,304 

5,586 

« 

( 4 ) 

( 4 > 

( 4 ) 


21,390 

8,000 

13,390 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

4,982 

2,042 

2,940 

( 4 ) 


( 4 > 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

10,945 

5,282 

5,663 

7,068 

$250 

335 

1,968 

4,515 

9,100 

4,210 

4,890 

9,041 

250 

1,565 

1,513 

5,713 

20,982 

8,562 

12,420 

5,5o5 

250 

897 


4,408 

25,907 

12,553 

13,354 

0) 


( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

18,998 

11,902 

7,096 

8,336 



8,336 


13,735 

7,391 

6,344 

20,720 


13,500 

7,220 


9,631 

4,696 

4,935 

( 4 ) 


( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

5,230 

2,407 

2,823 

0) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

31,910 

27,352 

4,558 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 > 

1 569 

785 

784 

1,405 


988 

417 


42,161 

16,864 

25,297 

39,927 


7,800 

26,183 

5,944 

13 641 

9,644 

3,997 

5,704 



2,030 

3,674 

1,851 

0) 

C) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

(») 

(>) 

( l ) 

13,870 

250 

900 


12,720 

6,332 

<») 

0) 

( 6 > 

m 




8,110 

3,800 

4,310 

1,800 


25 

1,131 

644 

3,369 


3,369 

(*) 


( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

5,328 

1,781 

3,547 

2,845 


194 

1,391 

1,260 

3,862 

0) 

(>) 

638 


225 

413 


5 733 

3 065 

2,668 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 




369 

0) 

(*) 

( 6 ) 

( 5 ) 




2,201 

0) 

0) 

( s ) 

( 5 ) 




2,371 

940 

1,431 

1,269 

250 

375 

636 

8 

3,382 

1,818 

1,564 

2,334 

250 

193 

682 

1,209 

2,729 

(>) 

o) 






8,879 

2,959 

5,920 

5,063 

250 

103 

4,270 

440 

Q 811 

3 270 

6 541 

480 



480 


2,275 

1,604 

671 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 




3,447 

2,451 

996 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 




28,648 

12,768 

15,880 

14,239 


636 

4,298 

9,305 

1,311 

326 

985 

854 

250 



604 


PAYMENTS DURING 

YEAR. 

VALUE OF 

PROPERTY 
OF YEAR. 

A.T CLOSE 

Institution number. 

Total. 

For 

running 

expenses. 

For per¬ 
manent 
improve¬ 
ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

buildings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

Invested 

funds. 

$32,424 

$26,701 

$5,723 

$304,806 

$128,756 

$176,050 

52 

899 

899 


( i > 

c i ) 

573 

53 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

< 2 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 2 ) 

< 2 ) 

54 

3 6,311 

3 6,311 


0) 

0) 


55 

( a ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 

56 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

c) 

57 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

< 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 > 

58 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

c 4 ) 

59 

( 4 ) 

o 


( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

c 4 ) 

60 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


61 




( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 > 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

62 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


63 




6,323 

6,323 


91,000 


91,000 

64 

15,873 

8,373 

7,500 

114,432 

500 

113,932 

65 

5,242 

4,826 

416 

70,750 

60,250 

10,500 

66 

( 4 ) 

( 4 > 

( 4 ) 

( 4 > 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

67 

11,000 

11,000 


( 4 ) 

0) 

0) 

68 

20,273 

20,273 





69 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

70 

( 4 ) 

(*) 


( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


71 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

72 

1,405 

1,405 





73 

40,212 

31,982 

8,230 

515,000 

400,000 

115,000 

74 

5,704 

5,704 





7*5 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

o 

76 

15,184 

11,684 

3,500 

50,000 

50,000 


77 

( 5 ) 

( 5 ) 

(•> 




78 

1,800 

1,800 

( 6 ) 

c 6 ) 

(») 

79 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

o 

80 

2,959 

2,826 

133 

14,500 

14,500 


81 

764 

764 


13,000 

13,000 


82 

( 4 ) 

( 4 > 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


83 


( s ) 

« 




84 


<•) 

( 5 ) 




85 

1,349 

1,349 


13,500 

13,500 


86 

2,541 

2,541 


31,100 

6,500 

24,600 

87 

(•> 

c) 

( 6 ) 




88 

4,771 

4,771 


62,219 

52,500 

9,719 

89 

480 

350 

130 




90 

( 4 ) 

o 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


91 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


92 

14,239 

5,188 

9,051 

18,687 

18,687 


93 

867 

867 


11,000 

6,000 

5,000 

94 


* Included in report of hospital. 

& Not reported. Included in general fund, Department of Health. 
6 Included in report of St. Mary’s Free Hospital for Children. 



















































































































382 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table V.—DISPENSARIES: 1910-Continued. 


£ 

a 

§ 

3 

•3 

3 

tH 


95 

96 

97 

98 

99 
100 
101 
102 

103 

104 

105 

106 

107 

108 

109 

110 
111 
112 

113 

114 

115 

116 

117 

118 

119 

120 

121 

122 

123 

124 

125 

126 


1 

2 

3 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


NEW YORK—Continued. 

New York City—C ontinued. 

Brooklyn Borough —Continued. 

German Hospital Dispensary. 

St. Nicholas Ave. and Stanhope St. 

Jewish Hospital Dispensary. 

Classon and St. Marks Aves. 

Kings County Hospital Dispensary. 

East Thirty-ninth St. and Clarkson Ave. 

Long Island College Hospital Dispensary. 

Amity and Henry Sts. 

Lutheran Hospital Association Dispensary. 

East New York Ave. and Powell St. 

Memorial Dispensary for Women and Children. 
827 Sterling Place. 

Methodist Episcopal Hospital Dispensary. 

Sixth St. and Seventh Ave. 

St. Catherine’s Hospital Dispensary. 

Ten Eyck St. and Bushwick Ave. 

Samaritan Hospital Dispensary. 

179 Seventeenth St. 

Williamsburgh Hospital Dispensary. 

South Third St. and Bedford Ave. 

Queens Borough- 
Flushing ( L. I .)— 

Flushing Hospital Dispensary. 

Forest and Parsons Aves. 

Queens Borough Tuberculosis Clinic. 

374 Fulton St. 

Richmond Borough — 

Stapleton (S. I .)— 

Richmond Borough Tuberculosis Clinic. 

Bay and Elizabeth Sts. 

Tompkinsville (S. I .)— 

Samuel Russell Smith Infirmary Dispensary .. 
Castleton Ave. 

West New Brighton (S. /.)— 

St. Vincent’s Hospital Dispensary. 

Bard and Castleton Aves. 

Niagara Falls: 

Niagara Falls Free Tuberculosis Dispensary.... 
44 Falls St. 

Ossining: 

Ossining Hospital Dispensary. 

210 Spring St. 

Poughkeepsie: 

Vassar Brothers’ Hospital Dispensary. 

Reade Place. 

Rochester: 

Health Association Dispensary. 

32 South Washington St. 

Rochester Dental Society Free Dispensaries 6 ... 
32 South Washington St. and School No. 14, 
Scio St. 

Rochester Homeopathic Hospital Dispensary... 
224 Alexander St. 

Rome: 

Rome Dispensary for Pulmonary Diseases. 

206 North James St. 

Saratoga Springs: 

Saratoga Hospital Dispensary. 

West Harrison and Division Sts. 

Schenectady : 

Children’s Free Dispensary. 

25 Lafavette St. 

Ellis Hospital Free Dispensary. 

Nott St. and Rosa Road. 

Southampton, L. i.: 

Southampton Hospital Dispensary. 

Meeting House Lane and Lewis St. 

Syracuse: 

Syracuse Free Dispensary. 

506 South Warren St. 

Tuberculosis Clinic of Syracuse. 

508 East Fayette St. 

Troy: 

Relief Station for Treatment of Communicable 
Pulmonary Diseases. 

2 Hill St. 

Samaritan Hospital Dispensary.. 

294 Eighth St. 

Yonkers: 

Sherman Memorial Dispensary. 

North Broadway. 

Yonkers Tuberculosis Dispensary. 

291 Nepperhan Ave. 

NORTH CAROLINA. 

Charlotte: 

North Carolina Medical College Dispensary. 

215 North Church St. 

Morganton: 

Grace Hospital Dispensary. 

King St. 

Wilmington: 

James Walker Memorial Hospital Dispensary.. 
Tenth and Rankin Sts. 


Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of cases treated. 

Year 

found¬ 

ed. 

Colored 

patients 

received. 

Medical 
staff at 
close of 
year. 

Nurses 
at close 
of year. 

German Hospital of Brooklyn. 

General, except contagious.... 

1889 

Yes. 

7 

2 

Jewish Hospital. 

General, except contagious- 

1901 

Yes. 

65 

3 

Kings County Hospital. 

General, except contagious.... 

1849 

Yes. 

0) 

(>) 

Long Island College Hospital. 

General, except contagious.... 

1857 

Yes. 

101 

7 

Entheran Hospital Association. 

Ear, nose, and throat. 

1909 

Yes. 

4 

1 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1881 

Yes. 

10 

(*) 

Methodist Episcopal Hospital. 

General. 

1881 

Yes. 

40 

3 

St. Catherine’s Hospital. 

General. 

1870 

Yes. 

18 

2 

Samaritan Hospital. 

General, except contagious 

1904 

Yes. 

15 

(*) 


and infectious. 




Williamsburgh Hospital. 

General,except contagious, in- 

1889 

Yes. 

17 

0) 


sane, and tubercular. 




Flushing Hospital. 

General. 

1X48 

Yes. 

0) 

( l ) 

City of New York. 

Pulmonary tubercular. 

1910 

Yes. 

1 

1 

City of New York. 

Pulmonary tubercular. 

1910 

Yes. 

1 

1 

Samuel Russell Smith Infirmary. 

General. 

1863 

Yes. 

3 

1 

St. Vincent’s Hospital. 

General, except contagious.... 

1903 

Yes. 

1 

1 

Niagara Falls Committee for Preven- 

Pulmonary tubercular. 

1909 

Yes. 

2 

1 

tion of Tuberculosis. 






Ossining Hospital. 

General, except contagious.... 

1888 

Yes. 

6 

10 

Vassar Brothers’ Hospital. 

General. 

1S82 

Yes. 

6 

(*) 

Rochester Public Health Association.. 

General. 

1897 

Yes. 

40 

3 

Rochester Dental Society.. 

Dental. 

1905 

Yes. 

9 

1 

Rochester Homeopathic Hospital. 

General. 

1889 

Yes. 

(i) 

(1) 

City of Rome. 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes.. 

5 

1 

Saratoga Hospital. 

General. 

1891 

Yes. 

2 

(*) 

Schenectady Day Nursery. 

General. 

1903 

Y es.. 

8 

4 

Ellis Hospital. 

General. 

1885 


6 

3 

Southampton Hospital. 

General. 

1909 

Yes. 

10 

3 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1888 

Yes. 

60 

2 

* 

City of Syracuse. 

Pulmonary tubercular. 

1908 

Yes. 

2 

1 

Troy Tuberculosis Relief Committee.. 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes. 

3 


Samaritan Hospital. 

Eye, ear, nose, throat, nerv- 

1896 

Yes 

6 



bus, and skin. 




St. John’s Riverside Hospital. 

General. 

1910 

Yes. 

16 

2 

Yonkers Sanitary League. 

Tubercular. 

1906 

Yes. 

15 

2 

North Carolina Medical College. 

General. 

1893 

Yes. 

10 

1 

Grace Hospital. 

General. 

1906 

Yes . 

3 

6 

James Walker Memorial Hospital. 

General, except contagious, in- 

1901 

Yes. 

3 

20 


ebriate and insane. 






i Included in report of hospital. 2 Not reported. s Not reported. Included in general fund, Department of Health. 



















































































































































GENERAL TABLES. 

Table V. — DISPENSARIES: 1910—Continued. 


383 


PATIENTS 

TREATED DURING 
YEAR. 


RECEIPTS 

DURING YEAR. 






Derived from— 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Total. 









Appropri- 

Dona- 

Care of 

Other 





ations. 

tions. 

patients. 

sources. 

7,092 

4,380 

2,712 

C) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

11,874 

4,735 

7,139 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

2,246 

1,631 

615 

G) 

(!) 




18,986 

10,876 

8,110 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

2,575 

1,254 

1,321 

$1,609 


■ 

$1,609 


1,653 1 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

974 


$974 


5,065 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

6,030 

3,454 

2,576 

G) 

G) 

G) 

724 

G) 

3,664 

1,757 

1,907 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

5,516 

2,560 

2,956 

G) 


G) 

1,788 

G) 

1,115 

572 

543 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

121 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 




8 

(2) 

( 2 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 




1,111 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

G) 

G) 

0) 

G) 

G) 

934 

582 

352 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

( 2 ) 

(2) 

( 2 ) 

800 


800 



60 

40 

20 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

(2) 

( 2 ) 

(2) 

(!) 



784 

G) 

4,263 

1,522 

2,741 

12,495 


11,495 

1,000 

2,296 

(2) 

( 2 ) 

2,558 


2,558 


3,726 

931 

2,795 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

47 

20 

27 

1,500 

$1,500 




288 

170 

118 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

596 

292 

304 

967 

750 

li 

174 

$32 

1,076 

941 

135 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

88 

60 

28 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

2,852 

1,765 

1,087 

3,601 

599 

2,438 


564 

135 

87 

48 

2,200 

2,000 

200 



135 

78 

57 


391 

( 2 ) 



501 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

3,758 

2,348 

1,410 

3,160 

1,000 

774 

1,236 

150 

101 

54 

47 

5,150 

5,000 



150 

1 150 

fiOO 

550 

425 



425 

250 

120 

130 

G> 


G) 

G) 

G) 

1,133 

632 

501 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 


Total. 


G) 

G> 

( l ) 

( l ) 

( 2 ) 


$950 


800 


G) 

0) 

0 ) 

0) 

G) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

9,000 

1,989 

0 ) 

940 

G) 

G) 

G) 

4,114 

2,000 

682 

G) 

2,225 

5,000 

425 

G) 

G) 


849 


For 

running 

expenses. 


G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

( 3 ) 

$950 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

G) 

G) 

800 

G) 

G) 

9,000 

1,989 

(') 

940 

G) 

849 

G) 

G) 

3,164 

1,500 

682 

G) 

2,225 

5,000 

325 

G) 

G) 


For per¬ 
manent 
improve¬ 
ments. 


( l ) 

G) 

G) 


( 2 ) 


G) 

G) 


G) 

G) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

G) 

G) 


G) 


G> 


G) 

G) 


$950 

500 


100 


G) 

G) 


VALUE OF PROPERTY AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 


Total 


G) 

( l ) 

G) 

(') 


$1,300 

G) 

G) 

( 2 ) 

G) 

G) 


G) 

(') 


Land, 

buildings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 


6 100 


G) 

G) 


63,500 

G) 


G) 

1,000 

G) 

G) 

2,500 


6 250 

G) 

60,229 

3,800 


40,000 

G) 

.« 


(') 

G) 

G) 

G) 


$400 

G) 

G) 

( s ) 

G) 

G) 


G) 

G) 

6 100 

G) 

G) 


63,500 

G) 


G) 

1,000 

G) 

G) 

2,500 


6 250 

G) 

51,259 

3,800 

40,000 

G) 

G) 


Invested 

funds. 


G) 


G) 


$900 

G) 

G) 


G) 


G) 


G) 

G) 


G) 


G) 


0 ) 


G) 

8,970 


G) 


95 

96 

97 

98 

99 
100 
101 
102 

103 

104 

105 

106 

107 

108 

109 

110 
111 
112 

113 

114 

115 

116 

117 

118 

119 

120 

121 

122 

123 

124 

125 

126 

1 

2 

3 


i Included in report of infirmary. 


6 Equipment. 


8 Children—6 to 15 years of age. 





















































































































Institution number. 


384 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 


Table V.—DISPENSARIES: 1910—Continued. 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 
C 

7 

8 
9 

10 

11 


12 

13 

14 


15 


10 

17 

18 
19 


1 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 

9 

10 

11 

12 

13 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


OHIO. 

Cincinnati: 

Cincinnati Eye, Ear, Nose, and Throat Dispen¬ 
sary. 

127 West Twelfth St. 

City Tuberculosis Dispensary. 

209 West Twelfth St. 

German Deaconess Home and Hospital Dispen¬ 
sary. 

Clifton Ave. and Straight St. 

Wilhelm and Gette Beckman Dispensary. 

731 West Sixth Ave. 

Cleveland: 

Babies’ Dispensary and Hospital. 

2500 East Thirty-fifth St. 

Good Samaritan Dispensary. 

710 Huron Road. 

Lakeside Hospital Dispensary. 

1200 Lakeside Ave. 

St. Luke’s Hospital Maternity Dispensary. 

6606 Carnegie Ave., SE. 

St. Vincent’s Charity Hospital Dispensary. 

East Twenty-second St. and Central Ave. 

Tuberculosis Dispensary. 

501 St. Clair Ave., NE. 

Women’s and Children’s Free Medical and Sur¬ 
gical Dispensary. 

1026 Webster Ave., SE. 

Columbus: 

Babies’ Dispensary 5 . 

276 East State St. 

Children’s Hospital Dispensary. 

Fair and Miller Aves. 

Starling Ohio Medical College Dispensaries 5 . 

315 East State and 710 North Park Sts. 
Elyria: 

Elyria Memorial Hospital Dispensary. 

East River St. 

Toledo: 

Thalian Anti-Tuberculosis Dispensary. 

118 Michigan St. 

Toledo District Nurse Association’s Dispensary. 
1517 Monroe St. 

Toledo Hospital Free Dispensary. 

1711 Cherry St. 

Wabash Employees’ Dispensary. 

1107 Broadway. 

OREGON. 

Portland: 

University of Oregon Medical Department Dis¬ 
pensary. 

286 Burnside St. 

PENNSYLVANIA. 

Allentown: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 51. 

118 North Fifth St. 

Altoona: 

Altoona Hospital Dispensary. 

Howard Ave. and Seventh St. 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 14. 

1716J Union Ave. 

Bangor: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 87. 

20 Market St. 

Beaver Falls: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 103. 

1621 Seventh Ave. 

Bellefonte: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 7. 

25 West High St. 

Berwick: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 16. 

Bloomsburg: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 93. 

131 West Maine St. 

Blossburg: 

State Hospital Dispensary. 

Braddock: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 101. 

812 Braddock Ave. 

Bradford: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 38. 

7 Main St. 

Bristol: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 82. 

Mill and Cedar Sts. 

Brookville: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 102. 

205 Main St.' 


Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of cases treated. 

Year 

found¬ 

ed. 

Colored 

patients 

received. 

Medical 
staff at 
close of 
year. 

Nurses 
at close 
of year. 

* 

Private organization. 

Eye, ear, nose, and throat. 

1902 

Yes. 

1 

2 

Cincinnati Anti-Tuberculosis League.. 

Tubercular. 

1907 

Yes. 

8 

4 

German Deaconess Home and Hos- 

General, except contagious.... 

1888 

No. 

15 

23 

pital. 






United Jewish Charities. 

General. 

1909 

No. 

2 

1 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1906 

Yes. 

10 

7 

Cleveland-Pulte Medical College. 

General. 

1872 

Yes. 

7 

2 

Lakeside Hospital.., 

General. 

1899 

Yes. 

43 

4 

St. Luke’s Hospital. 

Maternity. 

1904 

Yes. 

2 

2 

St. Vincent’s Charity Hospital__ 

General. 

1893 

Yes. 

25 

2 

Anti-Tuberculosis League. 

Pulmonary tubercular. 

1904 

Yes. 

5 

9 

Private corporation. 

General. 

1878 

Yes. 

14 


Instructive District Nursing Associa- 

Care and feeding of babies. 

1908 

Yes. 

1 

8 

tion. 






Children’s Hospital. 

General. 

1S92 f 

Yes. 

12 

12 

Starling Ohio Medical College... 

General. 

1907 

Yes. 

40 

2 

Elyria Memorial Hospital. 

General, except contagious.... 

1907 

Yes. 

12 

16 

Thalian Anti-Tuberculosis Society.. 

Tubercular. 

1904 

Yes. 

5 

4 

Toledo District Nurse Association. 

General, except tubercular.... 

1901 

Yes. 

9 

9 

Toledo Hospital. 

General, except contagious.... 

1903 

Yes. 

16 

2 

Wabash Employees’ Hospital Associ- 

General. 

1884 

Yes. 

2 


ation. 






University of Oregon. 

General. 

1909 

Yes. 

15 

1 

State of Pennsvlvania. 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes. 

3 

2 

Altoona Hospital. 

’ General. 

1883 

Yes.. . 

(S) 

(*) 

State of Pennsylvania. 

Tubercular. 

1907 

Yes. 

2 

1 

State of Pennsylvania. 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes. 

1 

1 

State of Pennsylvania. 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes. 

1 

1 

State of Pennsylvania. 

Tubercular. 

1907 

Yes.. 

1 

1 

State of Pennsylvania. 

Tubercular. 

1907 

Yes.. 

2 

1 

State of Pennsylvania. 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes.... 

1 


State Hospital for Injured Persons of 

General. 

1890 

Yes.... 

( s ) 

( s ) 

the Coal"Region. 




State of Pennsylvania. 

Tubercular. 

1909 

Yes.. 

1 

1 

State of Pennsylvania. 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes.. . 

1 


State of Pennsylvania. 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes.... 

1 

1 

State of Pennsvlvania. 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes. 

1 

1 








1 Equipment. 

2 Included in report of hospital. 

3 Not reported. 

4 Receipts also used for support of day-camp, tent-colony for children, and educational work. 

5 Includes report of Instructive District Nursing Association. 








































































































































GENERAL TABLES. 

Table V.—DISPENSARIES: 1910—Continued 


385 


PATIENTS TREATED DURING 
YEAR. 

RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 

PAYMENTS DURING 

YEAR. 

VALUE OF 

PROPERTY 
OF YEAR. 

AT CLOSE 

Institution number. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Total. 

Derived from— 

Total. 

For 

running 

expenses. 

For per¬ 
manent 
improve¬ 
ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

buildings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

Invested 

funds. 

Appropri¬ 

ations. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
patients. 

Other 

sources. 

3,000 

1,500 

1,500 

*1,500 



$1,500 


*1,500 

$1,500 


1 *2,000 

l *2,000 

- 

1 

748 

462 

286 

9,672 

*2,850 

*6,822 


9,672 

9,672 



2 

1,173 

391 

782 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

c 2 ) 

(2) 

h) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

3 

3,342 

1,371 

1,971 

2,000 


2,000 

2 000 

2 000 


6,000 

6,000 

4 

( 3 ) 

< 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

41,282 

915 

38,700 

167 

*1,500 

41,195 

20,300 

*20,895 

145,000 

70,000 

*75,000 

5 

12,000 

10,500 

1,500 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

C 3 ) 

1,000 

(8) 

(8) 


( 3 ) 

(8) 

(8) 

6 

■ 13,280 

7,780 

5,500 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

3,451 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

7 

187 


187 

1,089 


1,000 

89 


1,547 

1 547 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


8 

6,645 

2,882 

3,763 

227 


227 


1 200 

1 100 

100 

10,000 

10,000 


9 

2,713 

1,612 

1,101 

< 14,984 


14,932 

52 


5,651 

5 366 

285 

6,800 

6,800 


10 

1,000 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

1,361 


1,052 

272 

37 

1,384 

1 321 

63 

5,000 

5,000 


11 

849 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

14,424 

1,500 

577 

426 

11,921 

14,285 

14,285 


64,411 


64,411 

12 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 2 ) 

(2) 


(2) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


(2) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

13 

7,000 

4,000 

3,000 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

(8) 

(8) 

C 3 ) 

(8) 

(8) 

(8) 

200,000 

200,000 

14 

527 

257 

270 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


15 

267 

93 

174 

10,808 

8,322 

114 

44 

2,328 

6,770 

6,640 

130 

i 500 

1500 


16 

1,065 

444 

621 

12,048 


11,188 

113 

747 

9,581 

9,581 


i 500 

1 500 


17 

1,000 

400 

600 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

18 

1,443 

1,443 


( 7 ) 


( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

(7) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

( 7 ) 

(7) 

(7) 

( 7 ) 

19 

1,967 

1 550 

417 

822 


730 

78 

14 

413 

413 

( 3 ) 

(8) 

(8) 

1 

261 

123 

138 

(8) 

(8) 




9 438,570 

9 434,807 

9 3,763 


( 3 ) 

1 

2,084 

( 3 > 

( 3 ) 

( 2 ) 

< 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

2 

235 

111 

124 

m 

(8) 




(10) 

(10) 

(i°) 

( 3 ) 

(8) 


3 

85 

40 

45 

( 8 ) 

( 8 ) 




(10) 

(10) 

(10) 

(8) 

C 3 ) 


4 

55 

26 

29 

( 8 ) 

(8) 




(10) 

(10) 

(10) 

(8) 

(8) 


5 

37 

17 

20 

( 8 ) 

(8) 




(10) 

(10) 

( 10 ) 

( 3 ) 

(8) 


6 

171 

80 

91 

C 8 ) 

(8) 




(10) 

(10) 

(10) 

C 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


7 

43 

20 

23 

(8) 

(8) 



' .. 

(10) 

(!0) 

(10) 

(8) 

(8) 


8 

1H9 

02 

10 

( 2 ) 

(2) 


( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

(2) 

( 2 ) 

(2) 


9 

181 

85 

96 

( 8 ) 

(8) 



(10) 

(10) 

(10) 

(8) 

C 3 ) 


10 

15 

7 

8 

(8) 

C 8 ) 




(10) 

(10) 

(10) 

(8) 

C 8 ) 


11 

83 

39 

44 

(8) 

(8) 




(10) 

(10) 

(10) 

(8) 

(8) 


12 

53 

25 

28 

(8) 

(8) 




(10) 

(10) 

(10) 

(8) 

(8) 


13 


s Statistics for two dispensaries, at East State and North Park Sts., respectively. 

1 1ncluded in report of Wabash Employees’ Dispensary, Danville, ill. 

s Entire state appropriation for tuberculosis work reported under South Mountain Sanatorium, Mont Alto, Pa. 

9 Includes expenditures for all State Tuberculosis Dispensaries. 

10 Included in amount reported under State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 51, Allentown, Pa. 

-25 


44153°—14- 

















































































































386 BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table V. — DISPENSARIES: 1910—Continued. 


<D 

rO 

B 

3 

C 

3 

o 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


a 


PENNSYLVANIA—Continued. 


14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 
21 

22 

23 

24 

25 

26 

27 

28 

29 

30 

31 

32 

33 

34 

35 

36 

37 

38 

39 

40 

41 

42 

43 

44 

45 

46 


Brownsville: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 114. 
Uigh and Bridge Sts. 

Butler: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 15.. 
129 East Diamond St. 
Carbondale: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 84.. 
35 North Church St. 

Carlisle: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 4. 
51 East High St. 

Carnegie: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 83. 
10 Fourth Ave. 

Chambersburg: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 11.. 
Chambersburg Trust Co. Building. 
Chester: 

Chester Hospital Dispensary. 

Ninth and Barclay Sts. 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 12. 
310 Edgemont St. 

Clarion: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 43. 
Maine St. and Fifth Ave. 
Clearfield: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 62.. 
302 Market St. 

Coatesville: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 75. 
121 Main St. 

Columbia: 

Columbia Hospital Dispensary. 

Seventh and Poplar Sts. 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 74.. 
407 Locust St. 

Connells\tlle: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 70. 
140 North Pittsburg St. 

Corry: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 99. 
45 North Center St. 

Coudersport: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 27. 
Danville: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 28. 
110 Bloom St. 

Doylestown: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 23. 
114 North Maine St. 

Dubois: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 95. 
244 South Main St. 

Dushore: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 59. 
Kline’s Opera House. 

Easton: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 52. 
222 Ferry St. 

Emporium: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 8.. 
Erie: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 3.. 
510 State St. 

Everett: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 61. 
Main and Spring Sts. 

Franklin: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 72. 
Gettysburg: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 60. 
135 Baltimore St. 

Greensburg: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 57. 
Coulter Building. 

Hanover: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 86. 
328 Franklin St. 

Harrisburg: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 13. 
202 Locust St. 

Hastings: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 69. 
Fourth Ave. 

Hazleton: 

State Hospital Dispensary. 

Laurel Hill. 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 68. 
Associated Charity Rooms. 
Homestead: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 100, 
318 Eighth Ave. 


Supervised or conducted by— 


State of Pennsylvania. 

State of Pennsylvania. 

State of Pennsylvania. 

State of Pennsylvania.. 

State of Pennsylvania.. 

State of Pennsylvania... 

Chester Hospital. 

State of Pennsylvania.. 

State of Pennsylvania. 

State of Pennsylvania.. 

State of Pennsylvania. 

Columbia Hospital.. 

State of Pennsylvania. 

State of Pennsylvania.. 

State of Pennsylvania. 

/ 

State of Pennsylvania. 

State of Pennsylvania.. 

State of Pennsylvania. 

State of Pennsylvania.. 

State of Pennsylvania. 

State of Pennsylvania. 

State of Pennsylvania. 

State of Pennsylvania. 

State of Pennsylvania. 

State of Pennsylvania. 

State of Pennsylvania. 

State of Pennsylvania. 

State of Pennsylvania.. 

State of Pennsylvania.. 

State of Pennsylvania... 

State Hospital for Injured Persons of 
the Coal Region. 

State of Pennsylvania. 

State of Pennsylvania.. 


Class of cases treated. 

Year 

found¬ 

ed. 

Colored 

patients 

received. 

Medical 
staff at 
close of 
year. 

Nurses 
at close 
of year. 

Tubercular. 

1910 

Yes. 

1 

1 

Tubercular. 

1907 

Yes. 

2 

1 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes. 

1 

1 

Tubercular. 

1907 

Yes. 

2 

1 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes. 

1 

1 

Tubercular. 

1907 

Yes. 

1 

1 

General, except contagious.... 

1883 

Yes. 

5 

17 

Tubercular. 

1907 

Yes. 

3 

4 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes. 

1 

1 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes. 

1 

1 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes. 

1 

1 

General. 

1902 

Yes. 

0) 

(<) 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes. 

1 

1 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes. 

1 

1 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes. 

1 

1 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes. 

l 


Tubercular. 

1907 

Yes. 

l 

1 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes. 

1 

1 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes. 

l 

1 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes. 

1 

1 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes. 

7 

1 

Tubercular. 

1907 

Yes. 

2 

(3) 

Tubercular. 

1907 

Yes. 

5 

2 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes. 

1 

1 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes. 

1 

1 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes. 

1 

1 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes. 

1 

1 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes. 

3 

3 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes. 

8 

8 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes. 

i 

i 

General, except contagious.... 

1889 

Yes. 

3 

2 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes. 

3 

1 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes.... 

1 

1 







1 Entire state appropriation for tuberculosis work reported under South Mountain Sanatorium, Mont Alto, Pa. 

2 Included in amount reported under State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 51, Allentown, Pa. 



























































































































































GENERAL TABLES. 

Table V.—DISPENSARIES: 1910—Continued. 


387 


PATIENTS 

TREATED DURING 
YEAR. 

RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 





Derived from— 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Total. 









Appropri- 

Dona- 

Care of 

Other 





ations. 

tions. 

patients. 

sources. 

7 

3 

4 

0) 

(!) 




392 

185 

207 

(!) 

(0 




32 

15 

17 

0) 

( l > 




283 

133 

150 

( l ) 

0) 




29 

14 

15 

(!) 

(1) 




63 

30 

33 

( l ) 

0) 




3,360 

1,946 

1,414 

$17,838 

$6,000 

$1,897 

$5,863 

$4,078 

629 

296 

333 

(!) 

0) 




44 

21 

23 

0) 

(i) 




93 

44 

49 

0) 

(i) 




129 

61 

68 

0) 

0) 




1,025 

817 

208 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

(*) 

( 4 ) 

48 

23 

25 

0) 

C 1 ) 




51 

24 

27 

(1) 

(1) 




17 

8 

9 

C 1 ) 

0) 




( 3 ) 

o 

( 3 ) 

( i > 

0) 




53 

25 

28 

0) 

(i) 




58 

27 

31 

0) 

0) 




100 

47 

53 

o) 

(') 




16 

7 

9 

0) 

0) 




187 

88 

99 

m 

C 1 ) 




53 

25 

28 

\ / 

0) 

( 3 ) 




366 

172 

194 

« 

(■) 




29 

14 

15 

(») 

0) 




179 

84 

95 

0) 

( l ) 




20 

9 

11 

( l ) 

(») 




145 

68 

77 

0) 

(*) 




323 

152 

171 

-(*) 

(>) 




2,800 

1,319 

1,481 

( l ) 

(') 




118 

56 

62 

0) 

(') 




1,022 

870 

152 

( 4 ) 

(0 

(*) 



336 

158 

178 

<*) 

( l ) 




84 

40 

44 

(■) 

(■) 





PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 


Total. 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( ! ) 

( 2 ) 

$19,309 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 

( 4 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


For 

running 

expenses. 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

$19,309 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

(.*) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


For per¬ 
manent 
improve¬ 
ments. 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


VALUE OF PROPERTY AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 


Total. 


( 3 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

$80,013 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

(0 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


Land, 

buildings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 


( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

$74,154 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


Invested 

funds. 


15,859 


£ 


14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

19 

20 
21 

22 

23 

24 

25 

26 

27 

28 

29 

30 

31 

32 

33 

34 

35 

36 

37 

38 

39 

40 

41 

42 

43 

44 

45 

46- 


3 Not reported. 


«Included in report of hospital. 























































































































Institution number. 


388 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table V_DISPENSARIES: 1910—Continued. 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


Supervised or conducted by— 


Class of cases treated. 


Year 

found¬ 

ed. 


Colored 

patients 

received. 


Medical 
staff at 
close of 
year. 


Nurses 
at close 
of year. 


PENNSYLVANIA—Continued. 


* 


47 

48 

49 

50 

51 

52 

53 

54 

55 

56 

57 

58 

59 

60 
61 
62 

63 

64 

65 

66 

67 

68 

69 

70 

71 


72 

73 

74 

75 

76 

77 

78 

79 


Honesdale: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 18. 

907 Main St. 

Huntingdon: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 47. 

516 Penn St. 

Indiana: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 48. 

724 Philadelphia St. 

Jenkintown: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 73. 

Summit Ave. 

Johnstown: 

Cambria Steel Company’s Hospital Dispensary * 
Lowman St. 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 9. 

440 Lincoln St. 

Kane: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 115 6 . 

Kittanning: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 24. 

106 McKean St. 

Lancaster: 

Lancaster General Hospital Dispensary. 

530 North Lime St. 

St. Joseph’s Hospital Dispensary. 

College and Marietta Aves. 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 39. 

14 South Prince St. 

Lansford: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 89. 

Tunnell St. 

Lebanon: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 5. 

110 North Ninth St. 

Lewistown: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 10. 

49 West Market St. 

Lock Haven: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 46. 

East Water St. 

Lykens: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 78. 

252 Main St. 

Mauch Chunk: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 45. 

National Bank Building. 

McConnellsburg : 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 17. 

McKeesport: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 81. 

Eighth and Market Sts. 

Meadville: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 41. 

271 Arch St. 

Meyersdale : 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 30. 

Mifflinburg: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 29. 

Mifflintown: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 26. 

Main and Orange Sts. 

Milford: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 19. 

Milton: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 92.,_ 

1 Bound Ave. 

Monessen: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 88. 

Venneri Building. 

Monongahela: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 55. 

426 Main St. 

Montrose : 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 49. 

Chestnut St. 

Mount Carmel: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 71. 

Syndicate Building. 

Mount Pleasant: 

Mount Pleasant Memorial Hospital Dispensary. 
Main St. 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 77. 

Braddock Building. 

Nanticoke: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 113. 

156 East Green St. 

New Bloomfield: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 25. 

New Castle: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 35. 

77 East North St. 


State of Pennsylvania. 

State of Pennsylvania. 

State of Pennsylvania. 

State of Pennsylvania. 

Cambria Steel Company’s Hospital.... 
State of Pennsylvania. 

State of Pennsylvania. 

State of Pennsylvania. 

Lancaster General Hospital. 

St. Joseph’s Hospital. 

State of Pennsylvania. 

State of Pennsylvania. 

State of Pennsylvania. 

State of Pennsylvania. 

State of Pennsylvania. 

State of Pennsylvania. 

State of Pennsylvania. 

State of Pennsylvania.. 

State of Pennsylvania. 

State of Pennsylvania. 

State of Pennsylvania. 

State of Pennsylvania. 

State of Pennsylvania. 

State of Pennsylvania. 

State of Pennsylvania. 

State of Pennsylvania. 

State of Pennsylvania.. 

State of Pennsylvania. 

State of Pennsylvania. 

Mount Pleasant Memorial Hospital.... 
State of Pennsylvania. 

State of Pennsylvania. 

State of Pennsylvania. 

State of Pennsylvania. 


Tubercular. 

Tubercular. 

Tubercular 

Tubercular 

Accidents.. 

Tubercular 

Tubercular 

Tubercular 

General.... 
General.... 
Tubercular 

Tubercular. 

Tubercular 

Tubercular 

Tubercular 

Tubercular 

Tubercular 

Tubercular 

Tubercular 

Tubercular 

Tubercular 

Tubercular 

Tubercular 

Tubercular 

Tubercular. 

Tubercular. 

Tubercular. 

Tubercular. 

Tubercular. 

General 

Tubercular. 

Tubercular. 

Tubercular. 

Tubercular. 


1908 

Yes. 

1 

1 

1908 

Yes. 

1 

1 

( 3 ) 

Yes. 

1 

1 

1908 

Yes. 

1 

1 

1887 

Yes. 

3 

4 

1907 

Yes. 

4 

2 

1910 

Yes. 

1 

1 

1907 

Yes. 

2 

1 

1895 

Y es. 

3 

2 

1883 

Yes. 

9 

17 

1908- 

Yes. 

3 

2 

1908 

Yes. 

1 

1 

1907 

Y es. 

2 

1 

1908 

Yes. 

1 

1 

1908 

Yes. 

2 

1 

1908 

Yes. 

1 

1 

1908 

Yes. 

1 

1 

1907 

Yes. 

1 


1908 

Yes. 

2 

1 

1908 

Yes. 

2 

1 

1907 

Yes. 

1 

1 

1908 

Yes. 

1 

1 

1907 

Y es. 

2 

1 


1907 
190S 

1908 
1908 
1908 
1908 


Yes 

Yes 

Yes 

Yes 

Yes 

Yes 


1 

1 

2 

1 


1 

1 

2 


1 


1 


2 1 


1903 Yes 
1908 Yes 



( 6 ) 


1 


1910 

1908 

1908 


Yes 

Yes 

Yes 


1 Entire state appropriation for tuberculosis work reported under South Mountain Sanatorium, Mont Alto, Pa. 

2 Included in amount reported under State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 51, Allentown, Pa. 





























































































































































GENERAL TABLES. 

Table V.—DISPENSARIES: 1910—Continued. 


389 


YEAR. 


Total. 


13 

87 

48 

34 

7,822 

621 

25 

184 

515 

153 

371 

81 

251 

132 

38 

41 

108 

7 

173 

95 

47 

19 

208 


( 8 ) 


( 8 ) 


69 

267 

91 

50 

289 

65 

87 

41 

687 


Male. 


6 

41 

23 

16 

7,822 

292 

12 

87 

429 

80 

175 

38 

118 

62 

18 

19 

51 

3 

81 

45 

22 

9 

98 


( 8 ) 


( 8 ) 


32 

126 

43 

24 

136 

31 

41 

19 

324 


>URING 


RECEIPTS 

DURING YEAR. 



Derived from— 

Female. 

Total. 







Appropri- 

Dona- 

Care of 

Other 



ations. 

tions. 

patients. 

sources. 

7 

0) 

o) 




46 

(■) 

0) 

. 



25 

0) 

0) 




18 

0) 

( l ) 





( 5 ) 

( s > 

( s ) 





329 

0) 

0) 




13 

0) 

(!) 




97 

0) 

0) 




86 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

< 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

73 

( 6 ) 

( 5 ) 

( s ) 

( 6 ) 

m 

196 

0) 

0) 




43 

(1) 

0) 




133 

(1) 

0) 




70 

0) 

0) 




20 

0) 

(1) 




22 

0) 

(>) 




57 

(n 

0) 




4 

0) 

0) 




92 

(1) 

0) 




50 

0) 

0) 




25 

0) 

0) 




10 

0) 

(>) 




110 

m 

0) 




(») 

(») 

0) 




37 

(») 

0) 




141 

0) 

(*) 




48 

(>) 

(*) 




26 

« 

(>) 




153 

0) 

0) 




(») 

( 5 ) 

( 6 ) 

( s ) 

( s ) 

( 5 ) 

34 

( l ) 

0) 




46 

(*) 

0) 




22 

0) 

(•) 




363 

0) 

( l ) 





PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 


Total. 

For 

running 

expenses. 

For per¬ 
manent 
improve¬ 
ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

buildings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

( j ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 > 

( 3 > 

c) 

( j ) 

(*) 

(•) 

( s ) 

( 3 > 

( j ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

( a ) 

( 3 ) 

(») 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

( 3 ) 

(») 

( 5 > 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 6 > 

( s ) 

(*> 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

(») 

( 3 ) 

(») 

( 2 > 

( s ) 

(•) 

(*) 

( j ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

(«) 

. e> 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

( 6 > 

( 6 ) 

(•> 

« 

( 6 ) 


( 6 ) 

( 5 ) 

( j ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

(«) 

( 3 ) 

(*) 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

(») 

( 3 ) 

( s ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

(«) 

(*) 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

(») 

(*) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 > 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( 3 ) 

( s ) 

( s ) 

(») 

( 2 > 

( 3 > 

(*) 

( j ) 

( 2 > 

( a ) 

(») 

( s ) 

( j ) 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

(») 

( s ) 

( j ) 

C 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

c) 

(») 

( j ) 

C 2 ) 

( 2 > 

(») 

( 3 ) . 

( j > 

( 2 ) 

(*) 

(») 

( s ) 

( j ) 

( 2 ) 

(») 

(*) 

(») 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

(*) 

(») 

( 4 > 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

(>) 

(«) 

( 4 > 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( s ) 

(») 

( j ) 

( 2 ) 

( j ) 

( 3 ) 

(«) 

(») 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

(*) 

( 3 > 

(») 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

(») 

(») 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 6 > 

( 6 ) 

( 6 ) 

« 

( 6 > 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

(») 

( 3 ) 

( 2 > 

( 2 ) 

( 2 > 

(») 

( s ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

c 3 ) 

(») 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


( 3 ) 

(*) 


VALUE OF PROPERTY AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 


Invested 

funds. 


( 5 ) 


47 

48 

49 

50 

51 

52 

53 

54 

55 

56 

57 

58 

59 

60 
61 
62 

63 

64 

65 

66 

67 

68 

69 

70 

71 

72 

73 

74 

75 

76 

77 

78 

79 

80 


* Not reported. 
< Employees. 


& Included in report of hospital. 

8 Opened June 5, 1910; statistics for 7 months. 





































































































































390 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table V.—DISPENSARIES: 1910 —Continued. 


S 


d 

a 

a 


o 

P 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


Supervised or conducted by— 


£ 

i-i 


PENNSYLVANIA—Continued. 


81 

82 

83 

84 

85 

86 
87 


89 

90 

91 

92 

93 

94 

95 

96 

97 


99 

100 

101 

102 

103 

104 

105 

106 

107 

108 

109 

110 
111 
112 

113 

114 

115 

116 

117 

118 

119 

120 
121 
122 


Norristown: 

Charity Hospital Dispensary. 

Basin and Powell Sts. 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 31. 

Bean Building. 

Oil City: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 32. 

12 East First St. 

Philadelphia: 

American Hospital Dispensary. 

1809 Wallace St. 

American Oncologic Hospital Dispensary. 

Thirty-third St. and Powelton Ave. 

Amy S. Barton Dispensary. 

1207 South Third St. 

Bethany Dispensary.. 

2219 Bainbridge' St. 

Charity Hospital (dispensary). 

1731 Vine St. 

Children’s Homeopathic Hospital Dispensary.. 
Franklin and Thompson Sts. 

Children’s Hospital Dispensary. 

234 South Van Pelt St. 

Church Dispensary of Southwark. 

1719 South Ninth St. 

Episcopal Hospital Dispensary. 

Front St. and Lehigh Ave. 

Fabiani Italian Hospital Dispensary. 

Tenth and Christian Sts. 

Frankford Hospital Dispensary. 

Frankford Ave. and Wakeling St. 

Garretson Hospital Dispensary. 

Eighteenth and Hamilton Sts. 

German Hospital Dispensary. 

Girard and Corinthian Aves. 

Germantown Hospital Dispensary. 

640 East Penn St. (Germantown P. O.). 

Gynecean Hospital Dispensary. 

247 North Eighteenth St. ’ 

Hahnemann Hospital Dispensary. 

Broad St., above Race St. 

Henry Phipps Institute Dispensary. 

238 Pine St. 

Howard Hospital Dispensary. 

Broad and Catharine Sts. 

Jewish Consumptive Institute of Philadelphia 
Dispensary. 

406 Wharton St. 

Kensington Dispensary for the Treatment of 
Tuberculosis. 

Hancock St. and Susquehanna Ave. 

Kensington Hospital Dispensary. 

132 Diamond St. 

Lebanon Hospital Dispensary. 

459 North Fourth St. 

Medieo-Chirurgieal Dispensary. 

Seventeenth and Cherry Sts. 

Methodist Episcopal Hospital Dispensary. 

2301 South Broad St. 

Mount Sinai Hospital Dispensary. 

Fifth and Wilder Sts. 

Northern Dispensary of Philadelphia. 

608 Fairmount Ave. 

Northwestern General Dispensary. 

2019 North Twenty-second St. 

Pennsylvania Eye and Ear Infirmary. 

1237 Chestnut St. 

Philadelphia Chest and Throat Clinic. 

2114 Lombard St. 

Philadelphia Dental College Dispensary. 

Eighteenth and Buttonwood Sts. 

Philadelphia Dispensary. 

127 South Fifth St. 

Philadelphia Eye, Ear, Nose, and Throat Insti¬ 
tute. 

33 South Sixteenth St. 

Philadelphia Lying-in Charity Hospital Dis¬ 
pensary. 

Eleventh and Cherry Sts. 

Philadelphia Orthopedic Hospital Dispensary. 
1701 Summer St. 

Philadelphia Polyclinic Hospital Dispensary... 
1818 Lombard St. 

Presbyterian Hospital Dispensary. 

51 North Thirty-ninth St. 

Rush Hospital Dispensary. 

Thirty-third St. and Lancaster Ave. 

St. Christopher’s Hospital Dispensary. 

Lawrence and Huntingdon Sts. 

St. Joseph’s Hospital Dispensary. 

N. W. Girard Ave. and Sixteenth St. 


Charity Hospital of Montgomery 
County. 

State of Pennsylvania. 

State of Pennsylvania. 

American Hospital for Diseases of the 
Stomach. 

American Oncologic Hospital. 

Women’s Medical College Hospital.... 

Bethany Deaconess Home. 

Private corporation. 

Children’s Homeopathic Hospital. 

Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia.... 

Private corporation (Episcopal). 

Episcopal Hospital. 

Fabiani Italian Hospital. 

Frankford Hospital. 

Garretson Hospital. 

German Hospital. 

Germantown Hospital. 

Gynecean Hospital. 

Hahnemann Hospital. 

Henry Phipps Institute. 

Howard Hospital. 

Jewish Consumptive Institute of Phila¬ 
delphia. 

Private corporation. 

Kensington Hospital for Women. 

Lebanon Hospital Association. 

Medico-Chirurgical Hospital. 

Methodist Episcopal Hospital. 

Mount Sinai Hospital. 

Private corporation. 

Northwestern General Hospital. 

Private organization. 

Private corporation. 

Philadelphia Dental College. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Philadelphia Lying-in Charity Hos¬ 
pital. 

Philadelphia Orthopedic Hospital. 

Philadelphia Polyclinic Hospital. 

Presbyterian Hospital in Philadelphia. 

Rush Hospital. 

St. Christopher’s Hospital for Children. 
St. Joseph’s Hospital. 


Class of cases treated. 

Year 

found¬ 

ed. 

Colored 

patients 

received. 

Medical 
staff at 
close of 
year. 

Nurses 
at close 
of year. 

General. 

1889 

Yes. 

4 

14 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes. 

5 

1 

Tubercular. 

1907 

Yes. 

2 

2 

G astro-intestinal. 

1907 

Yes. 

40 

20 

Cancer and tumor. 

1905 

Yes. 

14 

( l ) 

General. 

1895 

Yes. 

(«) 

(«) 

General. 

1894 

Yes. 

4 

1 

General... 

1861 

Y es. 

18 

2 

General. 

1877 

Yes. 

16 

2 

General. 

1855 

Yes. 

30 

1 

General. 

1872 

Yes. 

2 


General. 

185L 

Yes. 

16 

(l) 

General. 

1904 

No. 

5 

3 

General, except contagious and 

1903 

Yes. 

G) 

0) 

insane. 





General. 

1897 

Yes. 

5 

1 

General, exceptcontagious and 

1860 

Yes. 

30 

6 

infectious. 





General. 

1864 

Yes. 

(*) 

0) 

Gynecological. 

1888 

Yes. 

1 

1 

General, except contagious ... 

1867 

Yes. 

67 

0) 

Tubercular. 

1903 

Yes.. .. 

10 

5 

General. 

1854 

Yes. 

13 

18 

Tubercular. 

1909 

Yes. 

16 

16 

Tubercular. 

1905 

Yes.. .. 

28 

3 

General. 

1883 

Yes.. .. 

9 

0) 

General. 

1908 

Yes.. .. 

12 

General, except contagious.... 

1882 

Yes. 

0) 

( l ) 

General. 

1892 

Yes. 

15 

1 

General. 

1900 

Yes. 

13 

15 

General.:.. 

1816 

Yes. .. 

23 

1 

General. 

1907 

Yes . 

12 

1 

Eye, ear, nose, and throat. 

1887 

Yes. 

2 

1 

Chest and throat. 

1906 

Yes.. .. 

4 


Dental. 

1863 

Yes. 



General. 

1786 

Yes.. .. 

6 

1 

Eye, ear, nose, and throat. 

1893 

Yes. 

2 


Gynecological and obstetrical. 

1828 

Yes. 

14 

22 

Nervous and deformed. 

1867 

Yes.. .. 

7 

m 

General, except contagious and 

1882 

Yes. 

G) 

26 

insane. 





General. 

1871 

Yes.. .. 

24 

3 

Chest and throat. 

1890 

Yes.. .. 

fi) 

(i) 

General. 

1875 

Yes.. 

13 

m 

General. 

1849 

Yes 

12 

G) 






1 Included in report of hospital. 

2 Entire state appropriation for tuberculosis work reported under South Mountain Sanatorium, Mont Alto, Pa. 

3 Included in amount reported under State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 51, Allentown, Pa. 

* Not reported. 






































































































































































GENERAL TABLES. 

Table V.—DISPENSARIES: 1910—Continued 


391 


PATIENTS 

TREATED DURING 
YEAR. 

RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 

PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 

VALUE OF 

PROPERTY AT CLOSE 

OF YEAR. 

Institution number. || 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Total. 

Derived from— 

Total. 

For 

running 

expenses. 

For per¬ 
manent 
improve¬ 
ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

buildings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

Invested 

funds. 

Appropri¬ 

ations. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
patients. 

Other 

sources. 

666 

364 

302 

0) 

( l ) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

81 

222 

104 

118 

(») 

(») 




G) 

(3) 

( 3 ) 

G) 

C) 


82 

438 

206 

232 

(») 

(») 




G) 

( 3 ) 

G) 

G) 

C) 


83 

817 

G) 

( 4 ) 

(*) 

(«) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

(5) 

G) 

G) 

G) 


84 

131 

59 

72 

( l ) 

(i) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

(i) 

G) 


G) 

G) 


85 

4,093 

G) 

( 4 ) 

C) 

( 6 ) 

C) 

( 6 ) 

C) 

C) 

C) 

C) 

C) 

C) 

C) 

86 

7,121 

1,220 

5,901 

$1,013 


$623 

$390 


$1,012 

$1,012 


$300 

$300 


87 

(<) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


G) 

G) 

(*) 

(*) 

G1 

G) 

(*) 

G) 

88 

8,431 

3,754 

4,677 

G) 

0) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

S9 

4,711 

3,141 

1,570 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 


G) 

G) 

G) 

90 

4,795 

G) 

( 4 ) 

973 


400 

88 

$485 

1,032 

1,032 


17,000 

2,000 

$15,000 

91 

25,650 

14,108 

11,542 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

92 

4,050 

3,037 

1,013 

( 4 ) 



G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 




93 

2,857 

1,750 

1,107 

( l ) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

94 

4,558 

3,992 

566 

(l) 

( 4 ) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 


G) 

G) 


95 

8,692 

5,263 

3,429 

0) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 


G) 

G) 

G) 

96 

5,823 

2,810 

3,013 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 


G) 

97 

565 


565 

( l ) 

G) 


G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 


G) 

G) 


98 

12,883 

8,488 

4,395 

G) 

G) 

G) 

-G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

99 

1,341 

759 

582 

(1) 


G) 



G) 

G) 


’ 4,000 

7 4,000 


100 

10,194 

G) 

( 4 ) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

101 

433 

233 

200 

6,619 


6,619 



6,449 

6,449 


9,000 

9,000 


102 

548 

261 

287 

9,379 


7,725 


1,654 

7,932 

6,226 

$1,706 

18,000 

IS,000 


103 

644 


644 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

104 

1 501 

652 

849 

3,650 


1,500 


2,150 

2,500 

2,200 

300 

3,500 


3,500 

105 

14,979 

8,460 

6,519 

G) 

G> 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

106 

<8 500 

4,250 

4,250 

m 


G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 


G) 

G) 

G) 

107 

57,454 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

0) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 


108 

7 500 

2 000 

4 509 

4, 799 


1,786 

1,386 

1,627 

4,079 

4,079 


42,921 

20,000 

22,921 

109 

] 474 

370 

1 104 

550 



550 


908 

908 

% 

G) 

G) 


110 

G) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 


111 

892 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

3,000 

3,000 


112 

^ nnn 

1 873 

3 127 

5 214 




5,314 

8 3,343 

3,343 





113 

22 025 

17 821 

15 214 

10,572 


255 


10,317 

8,510 

8,510 


161,000 

26,000 

135,000 

114 

429 

/4\ 


115 


115 


658 

658 





115 

V V 

K J 











1 400 


1, 490 

(l) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 


G) 

G) 

G) 

116 


( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 


G) 

G) 

G) 

117 

26,813 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

118 

6,149 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) . 

G) 

G) 

G) 

119 

355 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

120 

4,674 

2,804 

1,870 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 


G) 

G) 

G) 

121 

9,266 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 


G) 

G) 

G) 

122 


5 Included in report of American Hospital for Diseases of the Stomach, 
s Included in report of Women’s Medical College Hospital. 

7 Equipment. 

8 Exclusive of salaries. 

































































































































392 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table V.—DISPENSARIES: 1910—Continued. 


u 

a 

s 

3 

a 

a 


o 


3 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


P E NN S Y L V A NI A—Continued. 


123 

124 

125 

126 

127 

128 

129 

130 

131 

132 

133 

134 

135 

136 

137 

138 

139 

140 

141 

142 

143 

144 

145 

146 

147 

148 

149 

150 

151 

152 

153 

154 

155 

156 

157 

158 

159 

160 


Philadelphia— Continued. 

St. Luke’s Homeopathic Hospital Dispensary.. 
Fifteenth and Winghocking Sts. 

St. Timothy’s Memorial Hospital Dispensary.. 
Ridge Ave. and Jamestown St. (Manayunk 
P. O.). 

Samaritan Hospital Dispensary. 

Broad and Ontario Sts. 

Southern Dispensary. 

318 Bainbridge St. 

Southeastern Dispensary. 

736 South Tenth St. 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 21. 

12 South Seventeenth St. 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 107. 

1731 Orthodox St. 

University of Pennsylvania Hospital D ispensary. 
3400 Spruce St. 

Women’s Homeopathic Hospital Dispensary... 
Twentieth St. and Susquehanna Ave. 

Women’s Southern Homeopathic Hospital Dis¬ 
pensary. 

725 De Lancey St. 

Philipsburg : 

Cottage State Hospital Dispensary. 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 80. 

Potter Arcade. 

Phoenixville: 

Phoenixville Hospital Dispensary. 

Nutts Ave. 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 76. 

Church St. 

Pittsburgh: 

Children’s Hospital Dispensary. 

Forbes St. and McDevitt Place. 

Homeopathic Hospital Dispensary. 

Centre and Aiken Aves. 

Pittsburgh Free Dispensary. 

43 Fernando St. 

Pittsburgh Hospital Dispensary. 

Frankstown Ave. and Beechwood Boule¬ 
vard. 

Presbyterian Hospital Dispensary. 

Montgomery St. and Sherman Ave. 

St. Francis Hospital Dispensary. 

Forty-fifth St. 

St. John’s General Hospital Dispensary. 

300 McClure Ave. (North Side). 

South Side Hospital Dispensary. 

South Twentieth and Mary Sts. 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 20. 

510 Diamond St. 

Tuberculosis League Hospital Dispensary. 

Bedford Ave and Wandless St. 

Pittston: 

Pittston Hospital Dispensary. 

Main St. 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 94. 

80 North Maine St. 

Pottstown: 

Pottstown Hospital Dispensary. 

North Charlotte St. 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 106. 

354 High St. 

Pottsville: 

Pottsville Hospital Dispensary. 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 66. 

121 Mahantongo St. 

Punxsutawney: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 64. 

Mahoning and Findlet Sts. 

Reading: 

Reading Hospital Dispensary. 

Front and Spring Sts. 

St. Joseph’s Hospital Dispensary. 

Twelfth and Walnut Sts. 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 37. 

15 North Sixth St. 

Renovo: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 112. 

Sixteenth St. and Huron Ave. 

Ridgway: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 42. 

325 Main St. 

Rochester: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 22. 

Trust Company Building. 

Sayre: 

Robert Packer Hospital Dispensary. 

South Wilbur Ave. 


Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of cases treated. 

Year 

found¬ 

ed. 

Colored 

patients 

received. 

Medical 
staff at 
close of 
year. 

Nurses 
at close 
of year. 

St. Luke’s Homeopathic Hospital. 

General. 

1896 

Yes. 

0) 

0) 

St. Timothy’s Memorial Hospital. 

General. 

1890 

Yes. 

4 

4 

Samaritan Hospital. 

General, except contagious_ 

1891 

Yes. 

G) 

0) 

Private corporation. 

General.. 

1816 

Yes.. .. 

12 

Private corporation. 

Obstetrical and gynecological.. 

1890 

Yes. 

1 

2 

State Of Pennsylvania. 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes.. .. 

12 

4 

State of Pennsylvania. 

Tubercular. 

1909 

Yes. 

3 

2 

University of Pennsylvania Hospital.. 

General. 

1874 

Yes. 

70 

2 

Women’s Homeopathic Hospital. 

General. 

1882 

Yes. 

0) 

20 

Women’s Southern Homeopathic Hos- 

General. 

1896 

Yes 

3 


pital. 






Cottage State Hospital. 

Accident and medical. 

1890 

Yes. 

2 

10 

State Of Pennsylvania.. 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes 

1 

1 

Phoenixville Hospital. 

General. 

1893 

Yes 

8 

13 

State of Pennsylvania. 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes 

1 

1 

Children’s Hospital. 

General, except contagious.... 

1887 

Yes 

(i) 

(l) 

Homeopathic Medical and Surgical 

General. 

1866 

Yes. 

35 

46 

Hospital. 






Private corporation. 

General .. 

1873 


65 


Pittsburgh Hospital. 

• 

Eye, ear, nose, and throat. 

1896 


20 

(i) 

Presbyterian Hospital. 

General, except contagious and 

1909 

Yes 

4 

1 


infectious. * 





St. Francis Hospital. 

General. 

1909 

Yes 

20 

(!) 

St. John’s General Hospital. 

General. 

• 1896 

Yes 

12 

16 

South Side Hospital. 

General. 

] sss 


3 

1 

State of Pennsylvania. 

Tubercular. 

1908 


n 

7 

Tuberculosis League Hospital. 

Tubercular. 

1907 

Yes 


2 

Pittston Hospital. 

General. 

1892 

Yes 

15 

G) 

State of Pennsylvania. 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes 

2 

2 

Pottstown Hospital. 

General. 

1893 

Yes 

0) 

G) 

State of Pennsylvania. 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes 

1 

1 

Pottsville Hospital. 

General. 

1895 

Yes 

6 

G) 

State of Pennsylvania. 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes 

3 

2 

State of Pennsylvania. 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes 

1 

i 

Reading Hospital. 

General. 

1867 

Yes 

2 

St. Joseph’s Hospital. 

General, except contagious 

1873 

Yes 

3 

1 

State of Pennsylvania. 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes 

6 

1 

State of Pennsylvania. 

Tubercular. 

1909 

Yes 

1 

1 

State of Pennsylvania. 

Tubercular.... 

1908 


1 

1 

State of Pennsvlvania. 

Tubercular. 

1908 


1 

2 

Robert Packer Hospital. 

General. 

1885 


G) 

G) 






1 Included in report of hospital. 


2 Entire state appropriation for tuberculosis work reported under South Mountain Sanatorium, Mont Alto, Pa. 



































































































































































GENERAL TABLES. 

Table V.—DISPENSARIES: 1910—Continued. 


393 


PATIENTS TREATED DURING 
YEAR. 

RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 

PAYMENTS DURING 

YEAR. 

VALUE OF 

PROPERTY AT CLOSE 

OF YEAR. 

Institution number. || 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Total. 

Derived from— 

Total. 

For 

running: 

expenses. 

For per¬ 
manent 
improve¬ 
ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

buildings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

Invested 

funds. 

Appropri¬ 

ations. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
patients. 

Other 

sources. 

10,422 

7,211 

3,211 

G) 

(>) 

0) 

0) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

123 

1,581 

1,054 

527 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

124 

6,969 

3,845 

3,124 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

C 1 ) 

(!) 

0) 


(!) 

(1) 


125 

4,302 

2,002 

2,300 

$2,502 


$2,502 

$2,492 

$2,492 


$55, 600 

$10,600 

$45,000 

126 

1,200 


1,200 

800 


$.800 


800 

800 


10,000 

10,000 

127 

2,371 

1,117 

1,254 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 




( 8 ) 


( 3 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


128 

596 

281 

315 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 




( 3 ) 


G) 

0) 

( 4 ) 


129 

G) 


w 

G) 

0) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

130 

12,647 

6,020 

6,627 

G) 

(») 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 


G) 

G) 

G) 

131 

1,013 

(<) 

0) 

G) 

C 1 ) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 


G) 

G) 

G) 

132 

249 

198 

51 

(*) 

0) 

• 



0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 

0) 


13S 

199 

93 

106 

(2) 

( 2 ) 




( 3 ) 

(3) 

( 3 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


134 

529 

437 

92 

0) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

135 

45 

21 

24 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 




( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


136 

(<) 

(<) 

(<) 

G) 

0) 

G) 


G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

137 

x 16,342 

7,092 

9,250 

G) 

( l ) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

138 

8,135 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

3,179 


2,685 


494 

3,972 

3,972 


96,536 

80,000 

16,536 

139 

82 

32 

50 

(i) 


0) 

0) 

( l ) 

0) 


(!) 

C 1 ) 

140 

455 

225 

230 

0) 

0) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

141 

2 249 

1,095 

1,154 

(i) 

0) 


$208 

G) 

0) 

rn 

C 1 ) 

0) 

C 1 ) 


142 

915 

626 

289 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

(») 

G) 

143 

1,309 

1,051 

258 

G) 

(*) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

C 1 ) 

C 1 ) 

G) 

G) 

144 

2 264 

1 066 

1,198 

(2) 

( 2 ) 




( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 4 ) 

C 4 ) 


145 

692 

(<) 

(<) 

( l ) 

( l ) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 


146 

190 

161 

29 

0) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

(>) 


147 

201 

95 

106 

C 2 ) 

( 2 ) 




( 8 ) 

( 3 ) 

G) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


148 

272 

251 

21 

(>) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

149 

31 

15 

16 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 




G) 

G) 

( 3 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


150 

1,188 

890 

298 

0) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

151 


201 

225 

( 2 ) 

(2) 




( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


152 

45 

(<) 


(*) 

( s ) 




G) 

( 8 ) 

G) 

(<) 

(<) 


153 

1,551 

920 

631 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 


G) 

G) 

G) 

154 

930 

621 

309 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

(>) 

G) 


155 

71 

33 

38 


f 2 ) 




( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


156 

1 1 

qq 

Ifi 

17 

V ) 

\ / 

( 2 ) 




( 8 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


157 

Oo 

7G 

10 

37 

41 

\ ) 

(2\ 

f 2 ) 




( 8 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


158 

/ o 

oi 

01 

94 

k ) 

\ / 

( 2 ) 




( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 8 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


159 

40 

2,826 

1,766 

1,060 

V. ) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

G) 

(}) 

G) 

G) 

160 


s Included in amount reported under State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 51, Allentown, Pa. 4 Not reported. 































































































394 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table V.—DISPENSARIES: 1910 —Continued. 


- 

& 


3 

a 

a 

o 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


m 

a 


161 

162 

163 

164 

165 

166 

167 

168 

169 

170 

171 

172 

173 

174 

175 

176 

177 

178 

179 

180 
181 
182 

183 

184 

185 

186 

187 

188 

189 

190 

191 

192 

193 

194 


PENNSYLVANIA—Continued. 
Scranton: 

Hahnemann Hospital Dispensary. 

316 Colfax Ave. 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 40.. 
137 Adams Ave. 

West Mountain Sanatorium. 

203 Linden St. 

Selinsgrove: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 50.. 
106 Market St. 

Shamokin: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 53.. 
41 East Independence St. 

Sharon: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 36.. 

7 Dock St. 

Shenandoah: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 85.. 
31 South Jardin St. 

South Bethlehem: 

St. Luke’s Hospital Dispensary. 

Fountain Hill. 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 98.. 

126 West Fourth St. 
Susquehanna: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 97.. 
16 East Main St. 

Stroudsburg: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 65.. 
304 Maine St. 

Sunbury: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 110. 
26 North Fourth St. 

Tamaqua: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 91.. 

8 Hunter St. 

Tarentum: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 111. 
National Bank Building. 

Tioga: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 58.. 
Tionesta: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 34.. 
Titusville: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 90.. 
Sprice Place. 

Towando: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 44.. 
Tunkhannock: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 56.. 
Tioga and Bridge Sts. 

Tyrone: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 79.. 
18 East Tenth St. 

Uniontown: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 67.. 
57 West Main St. 

Warren: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 54.. 
City Hall. 

Washington: 

Washington Hospital Dispensary. 

34 Acheson Ave. 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 105. 

127 South Main St. 

Waynesboro: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 108. 
Main St. and Potomac Ave. 
Waynesburg: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 63.. 
Wellsboro: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 104. 
15 Central Ave. 

West Chester: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 6... 
122 Market St. 

West Fairview: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 96.. 
Wilkensburg: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 109. 
1001 Penn Ave. 

Wilkes-Barre: 

Mercy Hospital Dispensary. 

196 Hanover St. 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 1... 

184 South Washington St. 
Wilkes-Barre City Hospital Dispensary 
North River and Auburn Sts. 
Williamsport: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 33.. 
242 Pine St. 


Supervised or conducted by— 

Class of cases treated. 

Year 

found¬ 

ed. 

Colored 

patients 

received. 

Medical 
staff at 
close of 
year. 

Nurses 
at close 
of year. 

Hahnemann Hospital. 


1897 

Yes. 

0) 

( l 2 ) 

State of Pennsylvania. 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes. 

3 

2 

Scranton Society for Prevention and 

Pulmonary tubercular. 

1903 

Yes. 

12 

1 

Cure of Consumption. 






State of Pennsylvania. 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes. 

2 

1 

State of Pennsylvania. 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes. 

2 

1 

State of Pennsylvania. 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes. 

1 

1 

State of Pennsylvania. 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes. 

2 

2 

St. Luke’s Hospital. 

General. 

1872 

Yes. 

(!) 

(l) 

State of Pennsylvania... 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes. 

2 

1 

State of Pennsylvania... 

Tnhnmnlnr... 

/-* 

1908 

Yes. 

1 

1 

State of Pennsylvania. 

Tubercular... 

1908 

Yes. 

1 

1 

State of Pennsylvania. 

Tubercular. 

1909 

Yes. 

1 

1 

State of Pennsylvania. 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes. 

1 


State of Pennsylvania. 

Tubercular.. 

1909 

Yes. 

1 

1 

State of Pennsylvania. 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes. 

1 

1 

State of Pennsylvania. 

Tubercular. 

1907 

Yes. 

1 

1 

State of Pennsylvania. 

Tubercular.... 

1908 

Yes.. 

1 

1 

State of Pennsylvania. 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes. 

1 

1 

State of Pennsylvania. 

Tubercular... 

1908 

Yes.. 

1 

1 

State of Pennsylvania. 

Tubercular.. 

1908 

Yes.. 

1 

1 

State of Pennsylvania. 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes.. . 

1 

1 

State of Pennsylvania. 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes.. 

1 

1 

Washinglon Hospital... 

General, except contagious. . 

1897 

Yes . 

10 

16 

State of Pennsylvania. 

Tubercular. 

1909 

Yes.. . 

1 

2 

State of Pennsylvania. 

Tubercular. 

1909 

Yes.. 

1 

1 

State of Pennsylvania. 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes 

1 

1 

State of Pennsylvania. 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes 

1 

1 

State of Pennsylvania. 

Tubercular. 

1907 

Yes 

2 

1 

State of Pennsylvania. 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes 

1 

1 

State of Pennsylvania. 

Tubercular. 

1909 

Yes 

1 

1 

Mercy Hospital. 

General, except contagious. .. 

1898 


m 

(l) 

State of Pennsylvania. 

Tubercular. 

1907 

Yes 

11 

6 

Wilkes-Barre City Hospital. 

General, except contagious 

is 72 

Yes 

4 

(*) 


and venereal! 




State of Pennsylvania. 

Tubercular. 

1908 

Yes 

2 

2 








1 Included in report of hospital. 

2 Entire state appropriation for tuberculosis work reported under South Mountain Sanatorium, Mont Alto, Pa. 























































































































































GENERAL TABLES. 

Table V.—DISPENSARIES: 1910—Continued. 


395 


PATIENTS TREATED DURING 
YEAR. 

RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 






Derived from— 


Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Total. 









Appropri- 

Dona- 

Care of 

Other 





ations. 

tions. 

patients. 

sources. 

536 

250 

286 

0) 

( l ) 

P) 

( l ) 

p> 

478 

225 

253 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 




49 

24 

25 

$10,506 

*2,500 

*8,006 



29 

14 

15 

( 2 ) 

(*) 



137 

65 

72 

(*) 

( 2 ) 




143 

67 

76 

( ! ) 

( 2 ) 




625 

294 

331 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 




1,348 

1,054 

294 

pj 

( l ) 

( l ) 

P) 

p> 

344 

162 

182 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 




29 

14 

15 

( 2 ) 

(2) 




31 

15 

16 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 




155 

73 

82 

(J) 

( 2 ) 




46 

22 

24 

( 2 ) 

(2) 




121 

57 

64 

( 2 ) 

(2) 




44 

21 

23 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 




31 

15 

16 

(2) 

( 2 ) 




36 

17 

19 

(2) 

( 2 ) 




18 

8 

10 

( 2 ) 

(2) 




96 

45 

51 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 




45 

21 

24 

( 2 ) 

(2) 




117 

55 

62 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 




29 

14 

15 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 




30 

25 

5 

P) 

0) 

P) 

P) 

p) 

281 

132 

149 

(2) 

( 2 ) 




104 

49 

55 

(2) 

( 2 ) 




12 

5 

7 

(2) 

(2) 




21 

10 

11 


(2) 




58 

27 

31 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 




KQ 

27 

31 

(t) 

(2) 




144 

68 

76 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 




530 

346 

184 

0) 

( l ) 

P) 

P) 

p> 

1,432 

674 

758 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 




713 

597 

116 

0) 

P) 

P) 

P) 

p> 

624 

294 

330 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 





PAYMENTS DURING 

YEAR. 

VALUE OF 

PROPERTY AT CLOSE 

OF YEAR. 

Institution number, j 

Total. 

For 

running 

expenses. 

For per¬ 
manent 
improve¬ 
ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

buildings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

Invested 

funds. 

P) 

pj 

P) 

P) 

( l ) 


161 

( 3 ) 

( 3 > 

( 3 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


162 

*10,506 

*10,506 


*20,600 

*20,000 

*600 

163 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


164 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


165 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


166 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


167 

P> 

P) 


P) 

P) 

P) 

168 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


169 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


170 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


171 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


172 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


173 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


174 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


175 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


176 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


177 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


178 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


179 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

1 


180 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


181 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


182 

( l ) 

(!) 


(i) 

(>) 


183 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


184 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


185 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

(«) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


186 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


187 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


188 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


189 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


190 

P) 

P) 


P) 

P) 


191 




( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


192 

P) 

P) 

P) 

P) 

P) 

P) 

193 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


194 


3 Included in amount reported under State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 51, Allentown, Pa. 
« Not reported. 












































































































Institution number. 


396 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table V.—DISPENSARIES: 1910—Continued. 


195 

196 


l 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


PENNS Y LVANI A—Continued. 


York: 

State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 2. 
25 North Duke St. 

York Hospital Dispensary. 

West College Ave. 


RHODE ISLAND. 

Providence: 

Chestnut Street Hospital Dispensary. 
147 Chestnut St. 

Homeopathic Hospital Dispensary... 
70 Jackson St. 

North End Dispensary. 

149 Orms St. 

Rhode Island Hospital Dispensary... 
593 Eddy St. 

Woonsocket: 

Woonsocket Hospital Dispensary.... 
115 Cass Ave. 


SOUTH CAROLINA. 

Charleston: 

Shirras Dispensary *. 

72 Society St. 

Shirras Dispensary (Tuberculosis Department). 
72 Society St. 

Georgetown: 

Taylor Dixon Medical Dispensary. 


SOUTH DAKOTA. 

Lead: 

Homestake Hospital Dispensary. 
214 West Main St. 


ispensary. 

'222 North Front St. 


TENNESSEE. 

Memphis: 

City Dispensar 
— North 

East End Dispensary. 

Union and Myrtle Aves. 

Police Station Dispensary. 

Adams Ave. and Second St. 

Nashville: 

University of Tennessee Tuberculosis Dispens¬ 
ary. » 

614 Broadway. 

TEXAS. 

Dallas: 

St. Paul’s Sanitarium Dispensary. 

Bryan St. 

El Paso: 

El Paso County Dispensary. 

First and Campbell Sts. 

Fort Worth: 

Medical College Hospital Dispensary. 

Fifth and Calhoun Sts. 

Marshall: 

Texas and Pacific Railway Hospital Dis¬ 
pensary. 10 
West Grand Ave. 


VIRGINIA. 

Norfolk: 

City Dispensary.... 

City Hall Square. 

Clinic for Consumptives. 

90 Charlotte St. 

St. Vincent de Paul’s Hospital Dispensary. 
Church and Wood Sts. 

Richmond: 

City Free Dispensary. 

Fourteenth and Marshall Sts. 

Richmond Tuberculosis Dispensary. 

Fourteenth and Franklin Sts. 

Richmond Tuberculosis Dispensary. 

412 North Third St. 

Roanoke: 

Roanoke Free Medical Dispensary. 

110 Randolph St. 


WASHINGTON. 

Olympia: 

St. Peter’s Hospital Dispensary.. 
Eleventh and Columbia Sts. 


Supervised or conducted by— 


State of Pennsylvania. 
York Hospital. 


Chestnut Street Hospital.. 
Homeopathic Hospital.... 
Council of Jewish Women. 
Rhode Island Hospital.... 


Woonsocket Hospital. 


Alexander Shirras Endowment. 
Alexander Shirras Endowment. 

Private organization. 


Homestake Hospital. 


City of Memphis. 

Memphis Hospital Medical College.... 
City of Memphis. 


Nashville Anti-Tuberculosis League... 


St. Paul’s Sanitarium. 

County of El Paso. 

Medical College Hospital. 

Texas and Pacific Railway Hospital... 


Class of cases treated. 


Tubercular. 
General.... 


General. 
General. 
General. 
General. 

General. 


General, except tubercular.... 
Tubercular. 


General. 


General. 


Communicable, contagious 
and infectious. 

General. 


Emergency, accident. 
Tubercular. 


General.. 

General.. 

General, except contagious 
General.. 


City of Norfolk. 

Anti-Tuberculosis League of Norfolk. 

I 

St. Vincent de Paul’s Hospital.I General, except contagious_ 


General.... 

Tubercular. 


Medical College of Virginia. 

City of Richmond. 

City of Richmond. 


Women’s Civic Betterment Club. 


General. 

Tubercular (lungs and throat). 
Tubercular (lungs and throat). 

General. 


St. Peter’s Hospital.j General. 


Year 

found¬ 

ed. 


1907 

1880 


1901 

1908 

1908 

1868 

1873 


1883 

1910 

1900 

1879 

1900 

( 3 ) 

1907 

1911 


1896 

1909 

1906 

1886 

1905 

1906 
1856 

( 3 ) 

1908 

1907 

1909 

1887 


Colored 

patients 

received. 


Yes. 

Yes. 


Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 


Yes. 

Yes. 

No.. 


No. 


Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 


Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 


Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 


Yes.. 

No... 

( 12 ) 


Yes. 


( 3 ) 


1 Entire state appropriation for tuberculosis work reported under South Mountain Sanatorium, Mont Alto, Pa. 

2 Included in amount reported under State Tuberculosis Dispensary No. 51, Allentown, Pa. 

3 Not reported. 

* Included in report of hospital. 


Medical 
stall at 
close of 
year. 


10 

5 


( 4 ) 


8 

13 

65 


( 3 ) 


( 4 ) 


1 

15 

1 


( 4 ) 


4 

3 

16 

11 

3 

4 


10 


Nurses 
at close 
of year. 


( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


( 4 ) 


( 3 ) 


( 4 ) 


( 4 ) 


(•) 


( 3 > 


15 


5 Equipment. 

6 Exclusive of Tuberculosis Department. 

7 Included in report of Police Station Dispensary. 






















































































































GENERAL TABLES. 

Table V.— DISPENSARIES: 1910—Continued. 


39 ? 


PATIENTS TREATED DURING 
YEAR. 

RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 

PAYMENTS DURING 

YEAR. 

VALUE OF 

PROPERTY 
OF YEAR. 

AT CLOSE 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Total. 

Derived from— 

Total. 

For 

running 

expenses. 

For per¬ 
manent 
improve¬ 
ments. 

Total. 

Land, 

buildings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

Invested 

funds. 

Appropri¬ 

ations. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
patients. 

Other 

sources. 

845 

398 

447 

0) 

0) 




( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( J ) 

( 8 ) 

( 3 ) 


537 

229 

308 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

o 

( 4 ) 

( 4 > 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

7,000 

4,000 

3,000 

( 4 ) 



( 4 ) 

o> 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


0) 

0) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

d) 

f 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


(4) 

(4) 

( 4 ) 

1,000 

222 

778 

81,181 


8654 

8513 

814 

81,053 

81,053 


( 3 ) 

6 $80 

( 3 ) 

10,381 

<<) 

0) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 4 ) 

196 

82 

114 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

1,218 

391 

827 

( 3 ) 




( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

61 

30 

31 

( 3 ) 




( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

431 


300 


131 

308 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

82,850 

82,850 

( s ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 4 ) 


( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


136 

50 

86 

O 

( 7 ) 


( 7 ) 


4,000 

1,500 

2,500 

1,528 



1,528 

1,560 

1,260 

8300 

125,000 

125,000 


( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

8 2,631 

82,631 



8 2,631 

2,631 










( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 




( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


6,000 

2 500 

3,500 

3,000 

3,000 



3,000 

3,000 


1,000 

800 

200 

( 4 ) 


4 150 


( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 





18 351 

18 351 


(4) 


( 4 ) 



( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


(*) 

(3) 

(3) 

6 500 

6 500 



6,500 

5,500 

1,000 


147 

(3) 

(2) 

2 483 

1 000 

1 183 


300 

2,248 

2,248 


5,000 


5,000 

9,968 

4,894 

5,074 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 > 

1,283 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


5 000 

5 non 


(3) 

(3) 



( 3 ) 

1,266 

1,266 





192 

75 

117 

11 4 000 

4 000 



n 3,830 

3,830 


( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 


180 

73 

107 

(U) 

(13) 




( 13 ) 

( 13 ) 


6100 

8 100 


l 

436 

875 

1 106 

1,106 



1,232 

1,232 


c 100 

8 100 


640 

450 

190 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 


( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 



8 Includes report of City Dispensary. 

9 Not opened until 1911. 

10 Employees. 


11 Includes report of Richmond Tuberculosis Dispensary (Colored Department.) 

12 Colored only. 

13 Included in report of Richmond Tuberculosis Dispensary (White Department.) 


195 

196 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 


1 

2 

3 


1 


1 

2 

3 

4 


1 

2 

3 

4 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 


1 


Institution number. 


































































































398 BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910. 

Table V.—DISPENSARIES: 1910—Continued. 


a 


o 

fl 

a 


o 


3 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


Supervised or conducted by— 


Class of cases treated. 


Year 

found¬ 

ed. 


Colored 

patients 

received. 


Medical 
staff at 
close of 
year. 


OQ 

3 


WEST VIRGINIA. 


1 

2 


Parkersburg: 

St. Joseph’s Hospital Dispensary 
Fifth and Avery Sts. 
Wheeling: 

Tuberculosis Dispensary.. 

1314 Chapline St. 


St. Joseph’s Hospital 


General, except contagious.... 


Ohio County Anti-Tuberculosis 
League. 


Tubercular. 


1900 

1910 


Yes 

Yes 


(’) 


6 


1 

2 

3 


WISCONSIN. 

Milwaukee: 

Milwaukee Medical College Dispensary... 
900 Wells St. 

Milwaukee Society for the Care of the Sick 
Nineteenth and Wells Sts. 

Physicians’ and Surgeons’ Dispensary.... 
Fourth St. and Reservoir Ave. 


Milwaukee Medical College. 

Private corporation. 

Wisconsin College of Physicians and 
Surgeons. 


General, except infectious 

General. 

General... 


1S94 

1904 

1909 


Yes .. 
Yes.. 
( 2 ) 


28 

11 

19 


Nurses 
at close 
of year. 


(*) 

1 

2 

1 

1 


1 Included in report of hospital. 
































GENERAL TABLES. 

Table Y.—DISPENSARIES: 1910—Continued. 


399 


PATIENTS TREATED DURING 
YEAR. 

RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 


Derived from— 

Total. 

Appropri¬ 

ations. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care of 
patients. 

Other 

sources. 

496 

209 

287 

0) 

$1,200 

( 2 ) 

2,986 

5,460 


o 

o 

0) 


156 

61 

95 



1,319 

1,071 

3,100 

528 

791 


( s ) 

( 2 ) 

$180 

357 

714 


2,806 

5,000 

2,000 

1,100 


$60 

400 



PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 


Total. 


0) 

$ 1,200 

( 2 ) 

3,335 

600 


For 

running 

expenses. 


0 ) 

$ 1,200 

( 2 ) 

3,335 

500 


For per¬ 
manent 
improve¬ 
ments. 


0 ) 


( 2 ) 


$100 


VALUE OF PROPERTY AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 


Total. 


0 ) 


$7,000 


Land, 

buildings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 


0 ) 


$7,000 


Invested 

funds. 


1 

2 

1 

2 

3 


2 Not reported. 


Institution number. 



























































Institution number, 


400 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table VI.— INSTITUTIONS FOR 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


1 

2 

3 


1 

2 


1 

2 

3 


1 


1 

2 


3 


1 

2 


1 


1 

2 


1 


1 

2 

3 

4 


ALABAMA. 

Talladega: 

Alabama School for the Blind... 
South St. 

Alabama School for the Deaf. 

South St. 

Alabama School for the Negro 
Deaf and Blind. 

ARKANSAS. 

Little Rock: 

Arkansas Deaf Mute Institute... 

Park Ave. and Markham St. 
Arkansas School for the Blind... 
Eighteenth and Center Sts. 

CALIFORNIA. 

Berkeley: 

California Institution for the 
Deaf and Blind. 

Oakland: 

Industrial Home of Mechanical 
Trades for the Adult Blind. 
3601 Telegraph Ave. 

St. Joseph’s School for the Deaf.. 
4002 Telegraph Ave. 

COLORADO. 

Colorado Springs: 

Colorado School for Deaf and 
Blind. 

CONNECTICUT. 

Hartford: 

American School for the Deaf.... 

690 Asylum Ave. 

Connecticut Institute for the 
Blind. 

1205 Asylum Ave. 

Mystic: 

Mystic Oral School for the Deaf. 
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA. 
Washington: 

Columbia Institution for the Deaf 
Kendall Green. 

Washington Home for the Blind. 
915 E St.,NW. 

FLORIDA. 

St. Augustine: 

Florida School for the Deaf and 
the Blind. 

GEORGIA. 

Cave Spring: 

Georgia School for the Deaf. 

Macon: 

Georgia Academy for the Blind.. 
Forsyth Road. 

IDAHO. 

Gooding: 

Idaho State School for the Deaf 
and the Blind. 

ILLINOIS. 

Chicago: 

Ephpheta School for the Deaf_ 

3100 Belmont Ave. 

Illinois Industrial Home for the 
Blind. 

1900 Marshall Boulevard. 
MeCowen Oral School for Young 
Deaf Children. 

6550 Yale Ave. 

MeCowen Resident Home for 
Deaf Children. 

6756 Normal Ave. 


Supervised or 
conducted by— 

Class of inmates 
received. 

Year founded. 

Colored persons received. 

NUMBER 

employee 

OF Y 

Teachers. 

OF PAID 

S AT CLOSE 
EAR. 

Other 

employees. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

State of Alabama. 

Blind. 

1882 

No. 

12 

7 

5 

5 

2 

3 

State of Alabama. 

Deaf. 

1860 

No. 

18 

9 

9 

8 

3 

5 

State of Alabama. 

Blind and deaf. 

1892 

Yes. 

7 

7 


3 

1 

2 

State Board of Chari- 

Deaf, deaf-mutes, and 

1868 

Yes. 

24 

12 

12 

37 

16 

21 

ties. 

deaf-blind. 









State Board of Chari- 

Blind. 

1860 

Yes. 

13 

5 

8 

23 

5 

18 

ties. 










State of California. 

Blind, deaf, and deaf- 

1860 

Yes. 

24 

11 

13 

45 

32 

13 


mutes. 









State of California. 

Blind. 

1885 

Yes. 

4 

3 

1 

22 

14 

8 

Sisters of St. Joseph. 

Deaf. 

1895 

No. 

3 


3 




State of Colorado. 

Blind, deaf, and deaf- 

1874 

Yes. 

31 

8 

23 

34 

16 

18 


blind. 









Private corporation... 

Deaf. 

1817 

Yes. 

23 

6 

17 

26 

10 

16 

Private corporation... 

Blind. 

1893 

Yes. 

9 

2 

7 

8 

1 

7 

Private corporation... 

Deaf and deaf-mutes.. 

1871 

Yes. 

10 

.... 

10 

8 

2 

6 

Private corporation... 

Deaf and deaf-mutes.. 

1857 

No. 

27 

15 

12 

35 

16 

19 

Private corporation... 

Blind. 

1899 

No. 




3 

1 

2 

State of Florida. 

Blind and deaf. 

1885 

Yes. 

10 

4 

6 




State of Georgia. 

Deaf and deaf-mutes.. 

1848 

Yes. 

18 

4 

14 

23 

11 

12 

State of Georgia. 

Blind. 

1851 

Yes. 

14 

3 

11 

19 

8 

11 

State of Idaho. 

Blind and deaf. 

1906 

Yes. 

7 

2 

5 

7 

2 

5 

Private corporation 

Deaf and deaf-mutes.. 

1884 

Yes. 

8 


8 

3 

2 

i 

(Roman Catholic). 










State of Illinois. 

Blind. 

1893 

Yes. 




74 

42 

32 

Private corporation.. . 

Deaf and deaf-mutes.. 

1883 

No. 




3 8 


8 

• 

Private corporation... 

Deaf and deaf-mutes.. 

1908 

No. 




( 8 ) 

.... 

( s ) 


NUMBER OF 
INMATES 
RECEIVED 
DURING 
YEAR. 

INMATES AT CLOSE 

OF YEAR. 

All classes. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Total. 

Adults. 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

Male. 

Female. 

Male. 

Female. 

26 

17 

9 

83 



48 

35 

35 

23 

12 

167 



94 

73 

7 

4 

3 

56 



31 

25 

28 

17 

11 

265 

54 

53 

82 

76 

25 

13 

12 

116 

38 

28 

24 

26 

<r 








43 

27 

16 

241 

55 

57 

76 

53 

15 

12 

3 

15 

12 

3 



4 

i 

3 

31 

1 

1 

7 

22 

30 

13 

17 

190 

46 

26 

65 

53 

14 

12 

2 

173 

30 

25 

62 

56 

9 

5 

4 

42 

9 

6 

14 

13 

17 

10 

7 

56 

10 

.... 

46 

.... 

27 

15 

12 

124 

52 

28 

21 

23 




10 

4 

6 



9 

5 

4 

103 



53 

50 

195 

115 

80 

162 

34 

30 

64 

34 

6 

5 

1 

105 



56 

49 

7 

3 

4 

50 

14 

9 

13 

14 

21 

11 

10 

83 


23 

24 

36 

6 

4 

2 

102 

77 

25 



( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

3 35 

2 

2 

20 

11 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

( 4 ) 

(«) 

( s ) 

( s ) 

(«) 

(«) 


1 Included in report of Alabama School for the Deaf. 

2 Includes report of Alabama School for the Blind and Alabama School for the Negro Deaf and Blind. 

3 Biennial report. 













































































































GENERAL TABLES 


401 


BLIND AND DEAF: 1910. 


inmates at close of year— continued. 


Blind only. 

Deaf. 

Blind and deaf. 

Who can speak. 

Who can not speak. 

Total. 

Adults. 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

73 

-*-> 

o 

Adults. 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

73 

o 

Adults. 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

73 

•*-> 

o 

Eh 

Adults. 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

© 

a 

| Female, j 

© 

a 

Female. 

© 

73 

a 

| Female. | 

© 

73 

a 

| Female. 

© 

73 

a 

© 

73 

a 

© 

© 

73 

a 

Female. 

© 

73 

a 

| Female. 

© 

73 

a 

© 

73 

a 

© 

83 


48 

35 






















167 



94 

73 






27 



13 

14 






29 



18 

11 











108 

17 

21 

34 

36 

155 

35 

32 

48 

40 

2 

2 




116 

38 

28 

24 

26 
















76 

21 

22 

17 

16 

116 

26 

28 

36 

26 

49 

8 

7 

23 

11 






15 

12 

3 






















27 



5 

22 

4 

1 

1 

2 







45 

15 

8 

17 

5 

75 

15 

7 

26 

27 

69 

15 

11 

22 

21 

1 

1 





131 

23 

19 

46 

43 

42 

7 

6 

16 

13 






42 

9 

6 

14 

13 




















2 



2 


54 

10 


44 












124 

52 

28 

21 

23 











10 

4 

6 

















36 



16 

20 

40 



22 

18 

27 



15 

12 










108 

14 

13 

53 

28 

54 

20 

17 

11 

6 






105 



56 

49 
















10 

9 

1 

4 

Q 

17 

5 

3 

3 

6 

23 

7 

5 

6 

5 









30 


9 

7 

14 

53 


14 

17 

22 






ino 

77 

25 





















5 35 

2 

2 

20 

11 
















(■> 

(«) 

( 6 ) 

(•) 

(•) 






' 





















RECEIPTS DURING 

YEAR. 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 

i 

VALUE OF 
PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Total. 

Derived from— 


Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total 
(includ¬ 
ing in¬ 
vested 
funds). 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

Appro¬ 

pria¬ 

tions. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care 
of in¬ 
mates 

Other 

sources 

0) 

( l ) 




(i) 

0) 


0) 

( l ) 

2$71,284 

$71,284 




2$71,284 

$71,284 


2 $250,000 

$250,000 

(1) 

( l ) 




( l ) 

C 1 ) 


0) 

(!) 

3130,146 

130,146 




3102,146 

102,146 


350,000 

350,000 

33,000 

33,000 




27,000 

27,000 


100,000 

100,000 

87,497 

71,325 

$5,000 

$4,195 

$6,977 

80,810 

70,810 

$10,000 

1,241,741 

1,163,758 

26,450 

26,000 


450 


26,450 

24,820 

1,630 

165,000 

165,000 

0) 

(<) 

(*) 

w 

(<) 

« 

(<) 

« 

w 

(0 

98,790 

92,393 



6,397 

91,565 

77,317 

14,248 

375,000 

350,000 

61,371 

42,159 

50 


19,162 

61,438 

58,118 

3,320 

556,689 

172,939 

21,315 



12,792 

8,523 

18,066 

18,066 


49,144 

49,144 

14,166 

14,034 

64 

68 

14,166 

12,319 

1,847 

12,000 

12,000 

85,892 

80,500 


4,012 

1,380 

86,324 

81,324 

5,000 

736,000 

725,000 

12,750 

645 

5,779 

133 

6,193 

13,427 

2,925 

10,502 

25,500 

10,500 

20,000 

20,000 




20,000 

20,000 

# 

125,000 

125,000 

50,000 

50,000 




44,142 

44,142 


125,000 

125,000 

23,500 

23,000 



500 

23,000 

23,000 


170,000 

160,000 

25,000 

25,000 




55,000 

25,000 

30.000 

45,000 

45,000 

91,532 

26,522 

1,625 

63,385 

83,270 

11,544 

71,726 

157,747 

157,747 

77,840 

35,000 



42,84C 

109,569 

108,582 

987 

80,000 

80,000 

5 8 792 

4,287 

4,505 

& 8,792 

8,792 



(•) 


(«) 

(•) 


(«) 

(•) 








i 


44153°—14-26 


4 Not reported. 

6 Includes report of McCowen Resident Home for Deaf Children. 

«Included in report of McCowen Oral School for Young Deaf Children. 


Institution number. 








































































































































































































Institution number. 


402 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table VI.— INSTITUTIONS FOR 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


Supervised or 
com 


ipervisea or 
ducted by— 


ILLIN OIS—Continued. 
Jacksonville: 

Illinois School for the Blind. 

658 East State St. 

Illinois School for the Deaf. 

125 South Webster Ave. 

INDIANA. 

Indianapolis: 

Indiana School for Blind. 

North St. 

Indiana State School for the Deaf. 
Forty-second St. and Marion 
Ave. 

IOWA. 

Council Bluffs: 

Iowa School for the Deaf. 

South Ave. 

Vinton: 

Iowa College for the Blind. 

KANSAS. 

Kansas City: 

School for the Blind. 

Eleventh and State Sts. 
Olathe: 

Kansas School for the Deaf. 

KENTUCKY. 

Danville: 

Kentucky School for the Deaf... 
Second St. 

Louisville: 

Kentucky Institution for the 
Education of the Blind. 

1867 Frankfort Ave. 

LOUISIANA. 

Baton Rouge: 

Louisiana State School for the 
Deaf. 

St. Ferdinand and Africa 
Sts. 

CmNcnuBA: 

Chinchuba Deaf Mute Institute.. 
MAINE. 

Portland: 

Maine School for the Deaf. 

85 Spring St. 

MARYLAND. 

Baltimore: 

F. Knapp’s English and German 
Institute. 

851 Hollins St. 

St. Francis Xavier’s School for 
the Deaf. 

905 McCulloh St. 

Frederick: 

Maryland School for the Deaf 
and Dumb. 

South Market St. 

Overlea: 

Maryland School for the Blind... 
Maryland School for the Blind 
(Dept, for Colored Blind and 
Deaf.) 

Parkville P. O. 
MASSACHUSETTS. 
Beverly: 

Beverly Schoolfor the Deaf. 

113 Elliott St. 

Boston: 

Boston N ursery for B lind B abies. 

147 South Huntington Ave. 
Perkins Institution and Massa¬ 
chusetts School for the Blind. 
553 Broadway. 

l 


State of Illinois.. 
State of Illinois . 


State of Indiana. 
State of Indiana. 


State of Iowa. 
State of Iowa. 


State of Kansas. 
State of Kansas. 


State of Kentucky . 
State of Kentucky. 

State of Louisiana. 


School Sisters of Notre 
Dame. 


State of Maine. 


Private individual_ 

Mission Helpers of the 
Sacred Heart. 

State of Maryland.... 

State of Maryland.... 
State of Maryland.... 


Private corporation... 


Blind Babies’ Aid 
Society. 

Private corporation... 


Not reported. 


Class of inmates 
received. 

Year founded. 

Colored persons received. 

number of paid 
employees at close 
of year. 

NUMBER OF 
INMATES 
RECEIVED 
DURING 
YEAR. 

INMATES AT CLOSE 

OF YEAR. 

All classes. 

Teachers. 

Other 

employees. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Total. 

Adults. 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Male. 

Female. 

Male. 

Female. 

Blind and deaf-blind.. 

184S 

Yes. 

22 

7 

15 

59 

18 

41 

15 

9 

6 

190 

45 

45 

65 

35 

Deaf and deaf-mutes.. 

1836 

Yes. 

45 

15 

30 

82 

40 

42 

51 

33 

18 

410 

110 

74 

127 

99 

Blind. 

1847 

Yes. 

15 

6 

9 

39 

14 

25 

45 

22 

23 

161 

28 

37 

43 

53 

Deaf and deaf-mutes.. 

1844 

Yes. 

33 

10 

23 

54 

21 

33 

45 

20 

25 

311 

162 

149 



Deaf and deaf-mutes.. 

1855 

Yes. 

27 

11 

16 

37 

11 

26 

25 

11 

14 

222 

62 

52 

59 

49 

Blind. 

1860 

Yes. 

13 

5 

8 

28 

8 

20 

21 

14 

7 

139 

48 

36 

30 

25 

Blind. 

1867 

Yes. 

12 

4 

8 

27 

6 

21 

12 

5 

7 

80 

15 

13 

25 

27 

Deaf and deaf-mutes.. 

1861 

Yes. 

31 

14 

17 

32 

11 

21 

34 

24 

10 

244 

46 

46 

91 

61 

Blind, deaf, and deaf- 

1823 

Yes. 

27 

7 

20 

49 

27 

22 

44 

24 

20 

354 

74 

40 

117 

123 

mutes. 

















Blind. 

1842 

Yes. 

18 

5 

13 

22 

6 

16 

17 

13 

4 

107 

29 

28 

31 

19 

Deaf-mutes. 

1852 

No. 

10 

5 

5 

16 

6 

10 

20 

10 

10 

142 

57 

45 

22 

18 

Deaf and deaf-mutes.. 

1S90 

No. 

4 

.... 

4 

2 

2 

.... 

C 1 ) 

(*) 

( l ) 

37 

1 

2 

12 

22 

Deaf and deaf-mutes.. 

1876 

Yes. 

16 

2 

14 

( l ) 

C 1 ) 

0) 

20 

8 

12 

111 

25 

20 

34 

32 

Deaf-mutes. 

1851 

0) 

0) 

0) 

(1) 

0) 

C 1 ) 

0) 

(i) 

(i) 

(!) 

(i) 



(i) 

m 

Deaf and deaf-mutes... 

1897 

No. 

6 

6 

7 

2 

5 

30 


4 

12 

14 

Deaf and deaf-mutes .. 

1867 

No. 

17 

5 

12 

23 

9 

14 

9 

6 

3 

106 

26 

9 

39 

32 

Blind. 

1853 

No. 

15 

6 

9 

15 

7 

8 

16 

8 

8 

89 

10 

20 

24 

35 

Blind, deaf and deaf- 

1872 

Yes. 

9 

3 

, 6 

9 

2 

7 

11 

7 

4 

73 

22 

19 

19 

13 

mutes. 

















Deaf and deaf-mutes... 

1876 

No. 

6 


6 

6 

1 

5 

8 

3 

5 

26 



12 

14 

Blind. 

1901 

Yes. 




10 

1 

9 

15 

7 

8 

20 



9 

11 

Blind and deaf-blind.. 

1832 

Yes. 

50 

9 

41 

95 

23 

72 

44 

22 

22 

295 

67 

77 

so 

71 


2 

Paid b 

y Sta 

te of 

New 

Har 

npshire. 



















































































































GENERAL TABLES 


403 


BLIND AND DEAF: 1910 —Continued. 


INMATES AT CLOSE OF YEAR—continued. 

RECEIPTS DURING 

YEAR. 

PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 

VALUE OF 
PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Blind only. 




Deaf. 




ak. 

Blind and deaf. 

Total. 

Derived from- 


Total. 

For 

miming 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

Total 
(includ¬ 
ing in¬ 
vested 
funds). 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

Who can speak. 

Who can not spe 

Total. 

Adults. 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

3 

o 

H 

Adults. 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

13 

o 

Eh 

Adults. 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

O 

Eh 

Adults. 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

Appro¬ 

pria¬ 

tions. 

Dona¬ 

tions. 

Care 
of in¬ 
mates 

Other 

sources 

© 

■a 

a 

© 

B 

© 

© 

a 

© 

13 

B 

© 

Ph 

© 

13 

a 

d 

13 

B 

© 

© 

13 

a 

© 

13 

B 

© 

Pm 

© 

13 

a 

© 

a 

© 

Jan 

© 

13 

a 

^d 

13 

a 

© 

ps< 

© 

13 

a 

© 

13 

a 

© 

p^ 

© 

13 

a 

© 

13 

a 

© 

p*^ 

190 

45 

45 

65 

35 
















$62 500 

$57 *>00 


$5,000 


«AA AflA 

c;nn 


4MAA AAA 

C/4AA AAA 






230 

68 

40 

66 

56 

ISO 

42 

34 

61 

43 






15ft 

14A 


$4,128 

$ou,uuu 

i,<n kqq 

$00,OUU 

109 OKO 

OUU 

$4UU, UUU 

♦^UU, UUU 

161 

28 

37 

43 

53 
















75 673 

AlV/j t/UU 

75 673 



Ooo 

7** Ain 

loz,oOZ 

.m OCQ 

1/ , loO 

32,622 


40U,IDO 

A75 95«; 











311 

162 

149 








75 441 

75 000 



441 

79 AQQ 

79 HOC 

Q1 A71 

O • O y OOO 

Q1 A71 






17 

< 

5 

3 

2 

205 

55 

47 

56 

47 






57 000 

57 000 



5 a nm 

M, Uoo 

^9 non 

7 non 

01,0/1 

s;AA AAA 

ol, 0/1 

AAA AAA 

139 

48 

36 

30 

25 
















41 145 

37 700 



3 445 

40 QOA 

91 «J9 

1ft 1^? 

900 04ft 

9AA A.1C 

80 

15 

13 

25 

27 
















29 856 

28 915 



941 

28 540 

26 540 

2 000 

200 000 

9AA AAA 






121 

11 

13 

54 

43 

123 

35 

33 

37 

18 






64 712 

61 850 



2 862 

64 712 

54 713 

9 999 

325 000 

325 ftftft 






167 

25 

12 

53 

77 

186 

49 

28 

64 

45 

1 




i 

81 627 

79 346 



2 281 

81 627 

73 427 

8 200 

329 000 

325 ftftft 

107 

29 

2S 

31 

19 
















34,187 

34,040 



147 

38* 114 

36 542 

1 572 

250 000 

250 000 











142 

57 

45 

22 

18 






25,750 

25,500 

$250 



25 500 

25 000 

500 

500 000 

500 000 






9 

1 

... 

4 

4 

28 


2 

8 

18 






0) 

(*) 

0) 

(>) 

(*) 

(■) 

(») 

0) 

0) 

(>) 






92 

21 

14 

28 

29 

19 

4 

6 

6 

3 






23,800 

17,500 


2 6,300 


23,800 

19,300 

4,500 

85,000 

85,000 











C 1 ) 



o> 

(>) 






(•) 

1,200 

(0 

(>) 

(>) 

(>) 

(>) 

P) 

(■) 

(») 






4 



1 

3 

26 

.... 

4 

11 

11 






0) 

1,000 

0) 

0) 

(>) 

(>) 

« 

C 1 ) 

(>) 

0) 






60 

11 

6 

17 

26 

46 

15 

3 

22 

6 






30,180 

30,000 



180 

31,357 

31,357 


259,500 

255,000 

89 

10 

20 

24 

35 
















(i) 

0) 

(>) 

(!) 

(1) 

(!) 

(i) 

C 1 ) 

450,000 

450,000 

22 

4 

4 

7 

7 

22 

8 

4 

7 

3 

29 

10 

11 

5 

3 






11,350 

10,438 

3 600 

312 

14,485 

13,973 

512 

100,000 

100^000 






18 



8 

10 

8 



4 

4 






7,201 

3,600 

t 

1,389 


2,212 

7,021 

7,021 


56,723 

20 



9 

11 















7,676 


607 

7,069 

36,519 

6, 734 

29, 785 

51,431 

48,785 

292 

66 

76 

79 

71 











3 

i 

i 

i 


241,958 

64,946 

30,357 


146,655 

165,699 

149,284 

16,415 

3,299,627 

1,358,684 























5 

6 


1 

2 


1 

2 


1 

2 


1 

2 


1 


2 

1 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 


1 

2 

2 


3 From other states. 


Institution number. 

































































































































































































j Institution number. 


404 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table VI.—INSTITUTIONS FOR 


4 


5 

6 
7 


8 


1 

2 

3 


4 


1 

2 


1 

2 


1 

2 

3 

4 


1 


1 


2 


1 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


MASSACHUSETTS—Continued. 
Everett: 

New England Home for Deaf- 
Mutes. 

112 Fremont Ave. 
Northampton: 

Clarke School for the Deaf. 

46 Round Hill. 

Randolph: 

Boston School for the Deaf. 

North Main St. 

West Medford: 

Sarah Fuller Home for Little 
Deaf Children. 

93 Woburn St. 

Worcester: 

Memorial Home for the Blind... 
81 Elm St. 

MICHIGAN. 

Flint: 

Michigan School for the Deaf.... 
W est Court St. 

Lansing: 

Michigan School for the Blind... 
Pine St., north. 

North Detroit: 

Evangelical Lutheran Deaf- 
Mute Institute. 

Saginaw: 

Michigan Employment Institu¬ 
tion for the Blind. 

914 Houghton Ave. 

MINNESOTA. 

Faribault: 

Minnesota School for the Blind.. 
Station A. 

Minnesota School for the Deaf... 
MISSISSIPPI. 


Jackson: 

Institute for Deaf and Dumb 
Mississippi Institution for the 
Blind. 

MISSOURI. 


Fulton: 

Missouri School for the Deaf. 

St. Louis: 

Blind Girls’ Industrial Home... 
5235 Page Boulevard. 

Immaculate Conception Insti¬ 
tute for the Deaf. 

901 Garrison Ave. 

Missouri School for Blind. 

3815 Magnolia Ave. 

MONTANA. 

Boulder: 

Montana School for the Deaf and 
Blind. 4 

NEBRASKA. 

Nebraska City: 

Nebraska School for the Blind... 
Tenth Ave., Eighth and 
Ninth Sts. 

Omaha: 

Nebraska School for the Deaf.... 
Forty-fifth St. and Bedford 
Ave. 

NEW JERSEY. 
Bayonne: 

Home of Our Lady of Perpetual 
Help for the Blind. 

43 East First St. 


Supervised or 
conducted by— 

Class of inmates 
received. 

Year founded. 

Colored persons received. 

NUMBER OF PAID 
EMPLOYEES AT CLOSE 

OF YEAR. 

NUMBER OF 
INMATES 
RECEIVED 
DURING 
YEAR. 

INMATES AT CLOSE 
OF YEAR. 

All classes. 

Teachers. 

Other 

employees. 

a 

-4-> 

o 

<23 

a 

a 

03 

a 

a 

03 

Ph 

73 

O 

H 

Adults. 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

a 

-4—' 

o 

03 

*03 

2 

<a> 

73 

a 

Ph 

3 

o 

03 

*03 

oj 

"a3 

a 

03 

P*H 

a 

a 

03 

*3 

a 

03 

Ph 

03 

73 

a 

03 

73 

a 

03 

P=H 


Blind and dflftf-mntes - 

1901 

(') 




3 


3 

1 


i 

13 

5 

8 



Private corporation... 

Deaf. 

1867 

Yes. 

23 

1 

22 

40 

7 

33 

24 

17 

7 

142 

22 

17 

63 

40 

State of Massachusetts 

Deaf. 

1899 

Yes. 

20 

2 

18 

( 1 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

22 

13 

9 

141 

12 

13 

61 

55 

Private corporation... 

Deaf. 

1888 

Yes. 

2 


2 

5 

1 

4 

5 

2 

3 

15 



10 

5 


















Private corporation... 

Blind, deaf, and deaf- 

1905 

Yes. 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

4 

1 

3 

3 


3 

12 


12 



blind. 














State of Michigan. 

Deaf and deaf-mutes.. 

1854 

Yes. 

38 

11 

27 

63 

33 

30 

42 

20 

22 

322 



178 

144 

State of Michigan. 

Blind. 

1881 

Yes. 

18 

3 

15 

17 

' 5 

12 

(i) 

(2) 

( 2 ) 

134 



72 

62 

Synod of Missouri, 

Deaf and deaf-mutes.. 

1873 

Yes. 

3 

3 


4 

1 

3 

5 

1 

4 

28 

5 

2 

8 

13 

Ohio, and Other 


















States. 


















State of Michigan. 

Blind and deaf-blind.. 

1904 

Yes. 

6 

4 

2 

21 

9 

12 

21 

18 

3 

66 

50 

16 



State of Minnesota.. 1. 

Blind. 

1866 

Yes. 

15 

5 

10 

22 

3 

19 

17 

14 

3 

91 



53 

38 

State of Minnesota.... 

Deaf-mutes. 

1863 

Yes. 

33 

11 

22 

44 

15 

29 

28 

16 

12 

278 



155 

123 

State of Mississippi.... 

Deaf and deaf-mutes.. 

1854 

( 3 ) 

14 

5 

9 

7 

3 

4 

( 2 ) 

( j ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 



( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

State of Mississippi.... 

Blind. 

1848 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

(») 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

( 2 ) 


i 2 ) 

( 2 ) 

i 2 ) 



u) 

(J) 

State of Missouri. 

Deaf and deaf-mutes.. 

1851 

Yes. 

38 

18 

20 

60 

20 

40 

45 

31 

14 

311 

81 

47 

109 

74 

St. Louis Woman’s 

Blind and deaf-blind.. 

1868 

No. 




5 

1 

4 

5 


5 

37 


37 



Christian Associa- 

















tion. 


















Sisters of St. Joseph... 

Deaf and deaf-mutes.. 

1908 

No. 

8 


8 




30 

10 

20 

80 

10 


15 

55 

State of Missouri. 

Blind. 

1851 

Yes. 

15 

5 

10 

29 

5 

24 

26 

16 

10 

ion 

25 

33 

22 

20 

State of Montana. 

Blind and deaf_ 

1893 

Yes. 

14 

6 

8 

26 

15 

ii 

9 

5 

4 

83 

10 

10 

35 

28 

State of Nebraska. 

Blind, deaf, and deaf- 

1875 

Yes. 

9 

4 

5 

18 

5 

13 

11 

7 

4 

62 

18 

13 

17 

14 


mutes. 

















State of Nebraska. 

Deaf and deaf-mutes.. 

1869 

Yes. 

16 

5 

11 

32 

13 

19 

18 

9 

9 

185 

46 

40 

50 

49 

Private corporation... 

Blind and partially 

1890 

Yes. 

1 


1 




13 

9 

4 

9 


5 

2 

2 

blind. 

















1 Indeterminate. 

2 Not reported. 

3 In separate school but under same management. 

































































































GENERAL TABLES 


405 


BLIND AND DEAF: 1910—Continued. 


inmates at close of yeah— continued. 


Blind only. 


Adults. 


10 


134 


58 


91 


( 2 ) 


36 


10 


46 


100 25 


28 


59 


17 


12 


36 


33 


11 


Chil¬ 

dren. 


Deaf. 


Who can speak. Who can not speak. 


72 


53 


( J ) 


22 


13 


17 


62 


38 


( 2 ) 


142 

141 

15 

1 

191 


Adults. 


22 

12 


20 


14 


16 


( 2 ) 


80 


45 


Chil¬ 

dren. 


10 


60 


12 


105 


( 2 ) 


86 


10 


Adults. 


( 2 ) 


12 


15 55 


20 


16 


19 


23 


131 


11 


277 


( 2 ) 


311 


10 


Chil¬ 

dren. 


81 


125 


37 


47 


Blind and deaf. 


73 58 


155 


( 2 ) 


109 


28 


122 


( 2 ) 


74 


Adults. 


34 26 


Chil¬ 

dren. 


s a 


RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 


Total. 




Derived from— 


Appro¬ 

pria¬ 

tions. 


S3, 705 

65,630 
46,866 
6,804 

5,720 

122,163 
44,956 
7,110 

44,593 


29,537 
124,607 


37,620 

( 2 ) 


91,500 
18,892 

( 2 ) 

43,210 

5 47,800 

5 42,900 

43,600 

948 


S39,864 
35,643 
1,974 


Dona¬ 

tions. 


Care 
of in¬ 
mates 


S2,205 


112,353 

44,956 


25,500 


29,537 
124,607 


37,620 

( 2 ) 


91,500 


1,063 


3,076 


5,026 


( 2 ) 


Other 

sources 


$420 


n,27; 


1,791 


1,004 


1,710 


( 2 ) 


$1,080 

14,489 
11,223 
3,767 

853 

9,810 


1,080 


17,383 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 


Total. 


For 

running 
ex¬ 
penses, 


11,720 

( 2 ) 


43,210 


44,800 


42,900 


42,000 


15 


367 

( 2 ) 


600 


258 


( 2 ) 


6,805 

( 2 ) 


3,000 


1,000 


675 


$2,949 

62,452 
30,538 
5,322 

4,709 

129,613 
44,956 
6,001 

46,711 


29,537 
124,607 


37,620 

( 2 ) 


96,000 

8,838 

( 2 ) 

43,210 

5 62,800 

«43,667 

43,600 

1,426 


$2,949 

62,452 
20,583 
5,322 

3,081 

108,472 
44,956 
5,816 

46,711 


29,537 
65,131 


37,120 

( 2 ) 


91,500 

5,363 

(?) 

38,672 

47,800 

43,667 

43,600 

1,326 


For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 


$9,955 


1,628 


21,141 


185 


59,476 


500 


( 2 ) 


4,500 

3,475 


VALUE OF 
PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 


Total 
(includ¬ 
ing in¬ 
vested 
funds). 


4,538 


15,000 


100 


$8,700 

389,674 
92,825 
91,143 

16,989 

707,633 
182,991 
21,368 

102,201 


110,000 

340,004 


250,000 

( 2 ) 


350,000 

141,000 

( 2 ) 

379,791 

5 219,500 

125,000 

250,000 

( J ) 


Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 


$8,700 

150,000 
92,825 
8,400 

9,500 

693,980 
182,991 
21,368 

102,201 


110,000 

340,004 


250,000 

( 2 ) 


350,000 

83,000 

( 2 ) 

379,791 

219,500 

125,000 

250,000 

( 2 ) 


t The Training School for Backward Children is under same management and corporate name. 
5 Includes report of Training School for Backward Children, 
e Biennial report. 


| Institutio nnumber. 




































































































































































































































Institution number. 


406 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table VI.— INSTITUTIONS FOR 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


2 

3 


1 


1 


2 


3 


4 


5 

6 


7 


8 


9 

10 


11 


12 

13 

14 


15 


16 


17 


18 


NEW JERSEY—Continued. 
Jersey City: 

Institute for the Blind. 

537 Pavonia Ave. 

Trenton: 

New Jersey School for the Deaf.. 
Hamilton and Chestnut 
Aves. 

NEW MEXICO. 
Alamogordo: 

New Mexico Institute for the 
Blind. 

NEW YORK. 


Albany: 

Albany Home School for the Oral 
Instruction of the Deaf. 

98 North Pine Ave. 

Batavia: 

New York State School for the 
Blind. 

State Park. 

Brooklyn. 2 

Buffalo: 

Le Couteulx St. Mary’s Benevo¬ 
lent Society for the Deaf and 
Dumb. 

2253 Main St. 

Malone: 

Northern New York Institution 
for Deaf-Mutes. 

New York City: 

Bronx and Manhattan Boroughs — 

Association for the Improved 
Instruction of Deaf-Mutes. 

904 Lexington Ave. 

Home for the Relief of Destitute 
Blind. 

896 Amsterdam Ave. 

New York Institute for the Edu¬ 
cation of the Blind. 

Ninth Ave. and Thirty- 
fourth St. 

New York Institution for the In¬ 
struction of the Deaf and 
Dumb. 

West one hundred and sixty- 
third St. and Port Wash¬ 
ington Ave. 

Reno Margulies’ School for Deaf. 

532 West One hundred and 
eighty-seventh St. 

St. Joseph’s Institute (Girls’ De¬ 
partment). 

Bathgate Ave. and East One 
hundred and eighty-eighth 
St. 

St. Joseph’s Institute (Boys’ 
Department). 

Westchester P. O. 

Brooklyn Borough — 

Home for the Blind of the Church 
Charity Foundation. 

550 Wasliington Ave. 

Industrial Home for the Blind.. 

512 Gates Ave. 

St. Joseph’s Institute. 

113 Buffalo Ave. 

Richmond Borough- 

Mount Loreito (S. /.)— 

St. Joseph’s Asylum for Blind 
Girls. 

Pleasant Plains P. O. 

Rochester: 

Western New York Institution 
for Deaf-Mutes. 

1545 St. Paul St. 

Rome: 

Central New York Institution 
for Deaf-Mutes. 

711 North Madison St. 

Wappengers Falls: 

Gallaudet Home for Aged and 
Infirm Deaf-Mutes. 


Supervised or 
conducted by— 

Class of inmates 
received. 

Year founded. 

Colored persons received. 

NUMBER OF PAID 
EMPLOYEES AT CLOSE 

OF YEAR. 

NUMBER OF 
INMATES 
RECEIVED 
DURING 
YEAR. 

INMATES AT CLOSE 

OF YEAR. 

All classes. 

Teachers. 

Other 

employees. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Total. 

Adults. 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Male. 

Female. 

Male. 

Female. 

Sisters of St. Joseph of 

Blind and deaf. 

1889 

No. 

1 


1 

(>) 

o 

0) 

13 

4 

9 

108 

23 

75 


10 

Peace. 


















State of New Jersey... 

Deaf and deaf-mutes.. 

1883 

Yes. 

22 

6 

16 

29 

8 

21 

27 

15 

12 

160 

27 

13 

72 

48 

State of New Mexico.. 

Blind. 

1903 

No. 

4 

2 

2 

4 

1 

3 

18 

' 

10 

8 

34 

6 

5 

12 

11 

State of New York and 

Deaf and deaf-mutes. . 

1889 

Yes. 

4 


4 

13 

2 

11 

10 

4 

6 

51 



29 

22 

County of Albany. 


















State of New York.... 

Blind. 

1865 

Yes. 

18 

6 

12 

37 

14 

23 

0) 

0) 

o) 

146 

36 

32 

51 

27 

Sisters of St. Joseph... 

Deaf and semi-mute... 

1857 

Yes. 

27 

3 

24 

20 

4 

16 

27 

15 

12 

176 

34 

25 

59 

58 

State of New York.... 

Deaf and deaf-mutes.. 

1884 

Yes. 

12 

3 

9 

0) 

c) 

o 

97 

51 

46 

87 

14 

9 

31 

33 

Private corporation... 

Deaf. 

1864 

No. 

32 

4 

28 

61 

13 

48 

0) 

(>) 

0) 

229 

30 

25 

87 

87 

Society for the Relief 

Blind. 

18C8 

No. 




18 

3 

15 

6 

4 

2 

96 

44 

52 



of the Destitute 


















Blind of New York 


















and vicinity. 


















Private corporation... 

Blind. 

1S31 

Yes. 

24 

8 

16 

50 

12 

38 

30 

17 

13 

30 

4 

3 

13 

10 

Private corporation... 

Blind and deaf. 

1817 

Yes. 

52 

18 

34 

140 

53 

87 

55 

37 

IS 

491 

98 

64 

193 

136 

Private organization.. 

Deaf. 

1901 

No. 

9 

.... 

9 

5 

1 

4 

(0 

0) 

0) 

18 

3 

.... 

13 

2 

Private corporation 

Deaf and deaf-mutes.. 

1869 

Yes. 

15 


15 

28 

2 

26 

20 


20 

137 


32 


105 

(Roman Catholic). 


















Private corporation 

Deaf and deaf-mutes .. 

1869 

Yes. 

30 

8 

22 

67 

19 

48 

38 

38 


260 

48 


212 


(Roman Catholic). 


















Church Charity Foun- 

Blind. 

1895 

No. 




7 

1 

6 




15 


15 



dation of Long Is- 


















land. 


















Private corporation... 

Blind. 

1893 

Yes. 

2 

2 


5 

3 

2 

5 

5 


40 

40 




Ladies of the Sacred 

Deaf and deaf-mutes.. 

1869 

Yes. 

12 


12 

25 

2 

23 

15 


15 

103 


23 


80 

Heart of Mary. 


















Mission of the Immac- 

Blind. 

1895 

No. 

4 


4 

0) 

(>) 

C 1 ) 

6 


6 

57 


41 


16 

ulate Virgin. 


















Private corporation... 

Deaf and deaf-mutes.. 

1876 

Yes. 

25 

6 

19 

32 

6 

26 

21 

10 

11 

202 

29 

30 

74 

69 

Private corporation... 

Deaf-mutes. 

1874 

Yes. 

19 

3 

16 

15 

2 

13 

94 

58 

36 

94 

29 

22 

28 

15 

Private corporation... 

Blind and deaf over 60. 

1872 

No. 

(>) 

0) 

0) 

7 

2 

5 

1 

1 

.... 

25 

9 

16 

■ 



1 Not reported. 


1 See New York City 













































































































GENERAL TABLES 


407 


BLIND AND DEAF: 1910—Continued. 


VALUE OF 
PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 

Total 
(includ¬ 
ing in¬ 
vested 
funds). 

Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 

0) 

( l ) 

S376,742 

$376,742 

24,000 

24,000 

443,723 

443,723 

234,000 

234,000 

138,658 

138,658 

223,066 

223,066 

649,000 

150,000 

2,099,272 

1,462,206 

1,829,165 

726,000 

0) 

( l ) 

208,500 

208,500 

529,981 

529,981 

29,742 

15,000 

48,679 

31,519 

122,500 

122,500 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

175,407 

175,407 

151,205 

151,205 

235,010 

82,000 


inmates at close of year— continued. 


Blind only. 


100 


34 


146 


96 


30 


15 

40 


57 


Adults. 


23 


67 


36 


44 


40 


32 


52 


15 


41 


Chil¬ 

dren. 


12 


51 


13 


10 


11 


27 


10 


16 


Deaf. 


Who can speak. Who can not speak. 


4 

96 


51 


48 


74 


229 


485 

18 

18 

30 


30 


202 


60 


Adults. 


16 


30 


98 


29 


10 


25 


Chil¬ 

dren. 


39 


29 


19 


30 


87 


60 191 


12 


30 


13 


24 


74 


28 


33 


22 


15 


33 


87 


136 

2 

6 


15 


69 


15 


64 


128 


13 


119 


230 


83 


34 


19 


Adults. 


11 


27 


42 


19 


18 


20 


18 


15 


13 


Chil¬ 

dren. 


33 


40 


188 


15 


43 


99 


65 


Blind and deaf. 


Adults. 


Chil¬ 

dren. 


Total. 


( l ) 

$46,768 

12,759 

16,250 

54,869 

51,584 

34,108 

76,864 
30,323 

184,841 

361,438 

( l ) 

46,002 

72,831 

5,606 

26,601 
26,847 

( 3 ) 

67,959 

43,722 


CEEPTS DURING 

YEAR. 

PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 

Derived from- 











For 






For 

perma- 





Total. 

running 

ex- 

nent 

im- 

Appro- 

Dona- 

Care 

Other 


penses. 

prove- 

pria- 

tions. 

tions. 

of in¬ 
mates 

sources 



ments. 

( l ) 

( l ) 

$1,000 

0) 

0) 

( l ) 

( l ) 

$45,000 



$1,768 

$46,767 

$41,767 

$5,000 

12,500 



259 

11,030 

11,030 

16,250 




16,250 

16,250 


53,218 



1,651 

54,777 

47,289 

7,488 

45,715 

$1,175 

2,073 

2,621 

50,380 

49,780 

600 

25,647 



8,461 

32,936 

32,936 


65,400 

1,932 

106 

9,426 

78,777 

76,577 

2,200 


4,575 

1,844 

23,904 

0) 

23,593 

(>) 

45,972 

5,070 


133,799 

253,017 

94,532 

158,485 

148,949 

300 


212,189 

200,834 

200,834 



(') 


(!) 

(*) 


41,774 

51 

170 

4,007 

37,306 

37,306 


67,563 

3,100 

1,360 

808 

73,884 

73,884 


320 

459 

72 

4,755 

5,606 

5,606 



2,677 

693 

23,231 

30,409 

28,201 

2,208 

26,733 


105 

9 

29,276 

25,721 

3,555 

( 3 ) 


( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

( 3 ) 

53,004 


450 

<14,505 

54,904 

53,692 

1,212 

43,440 



282 

34,358 

33,063 

1,295 

100 

356 

250 

9,492 

9? 502 

8,644 

858 


9 

10 

11 

12 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 


* Included in report of Mission of the Immaculate Virgin, New York City. 


* Includes bank balance. 


Institution number. 





























































































































































Institution number. 


408 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table VI.— INSTITUTIONS FOR 


NAME AND LOCATION. 


Supervised or 
conducted by— 


NORTH CAROLINA. 


1 


Raleigh: 

State School for the Blind and 
the Deaf. 

McDowell and Jones Sts. 


State of North Carolina 


NORTH DAKOTA. 


1 

2 


Bathgate: 

North Dakota Blind Asylum_ State of North Dakota. 

Devils Lake: 

School for the Deaf and Dumb of State of North Dakota. 
North Dakota. 


OHIO. 

Cincinnati: 

Notre Dame School for the Deaf.. 
321 East Sixth St. 
Columbus: 

Ohio State School for the Blind.. 
Main and Parsons Aves. 

State School for the Deaf. 

Town and Washington Aves. 
Mount Healthy : 

Clovernook Home for the Blind. 
Hamilton Pike. 

Central College: 

Ohio Home for Aged and Infirm 
Deaf. 

OKLAHOMA. 


Sisters of Notre Dame. 

State of Ohio. 

State of Ohio. 


Private corporation.. 


Ohio Deaf-Mute 
Alumni Association. 


1 

2 


1 


1 

2 

3 


4 

5 

6 
7 


8 

9 

10 


11 


Fort Gibson: 

Oklahoma School for the Blind.. 
Sulphur: 

State School for the Deaf. 

OREGON. 


Salem: 

Oregon Institute for the Blind.. 

South Church St. 

PENNSYLVANIA. 

Doy^lestown: 

Home for Aged and Infirm Deaf. 

East Court St. 

Philadelphia: 

Chapin Memorial Home for Aged 
Blind. 

6713 Woodland Ave. 

Home for Training in Speech of 
Deaf Children Before They 
Are of School Age. 

Be 1 m o n t and Monument 
Aves. 

Pennsylvania Industrial Home 
for Blind Women. 

3827 Powelton Ave. 

Pennsylvania Institution for the 
Deaf and Dumb. 

Mount Airy P. O. 

Pennsylvania Institution for the 
Instruction of the Blind. 

Overbrook P. O. 

Pennsylvania Retreat for Blind- 
Mutes and Aged and Infirm 
Blind Persons. 

3518 Lancaster Ave. 

Pittsburgh: 

De Paul Institute. 

Crawford Ave. (Brookline). 

Western Pennsylvania Institu¬ 
tion for the Blind. 

Bellefield Ave. 

Western Pennsylvania Institu¬ 
tion for the Instruction of the 
Deaf and Dumb. 

Edgewood Park. 

Scranton: 

Pennsylvania Oral School for the 
Deaf. 


State Board of Educa¬ 
tion. 

State of Oklahoma.... 


State of Oregon 


Pennsylvania Society 
for the Advancement 
of the Deaf. 

Private corporation... 


State of Pennsylvania. 


Private corporation... 


Private corporation... 


Private corporation... 


Private corporation... 


Ladies’ Aid Association 
Private corporation... 


Private corporation... 


State of Pennsylvania. 


Class of inmates 
received. 


Blind and deaf. 


1845 


e 

o 


73 

<X> 


O 

O 


Yes. 


Blind. 

Deaf and deaf-mutes.. 


1895 

1890 


No. 

No. 


Deaf-mutes. 


1889 


No. 


Blind and purblind... 

Deaf, deaf-mutes, and 
deaf-blind. 

Blind. 


1837 

1829 

1903 


Yes. 

Yes. 

No. 


Deaf-mutes and blind 
deaf-mutes. 


1896 


Yes. 


Blind. 

Deaf and deaf-mutes.. 


Blind 


189S No. 
1908 No. 


1873 


No. 


Blind and deaf-mutes . 


Blind. 


Deaf. 


1902 


1906 


1S92 


No. 

( 2 ) 

No. 


Blind. 

Blind, deaf, and deaf- 
mutes. 

Blind. 

Blind, deaf, and deaf- 
mutes. 

Deaf-mutes and other 
defective children. 

Blind. 

Deaf. 

Deaf-mutes. 


1868 

1820 

1833 

1884 

1908 

1888 

1871 

1883 


No. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 

Yes. 


NUMBER OF PAID 
EMPLOYEES AT CLOSE 

OF YEAR. 

NUMBER OF 
INMATES 
RECEIVED 
DURING 
YEAR. 

Teachers. 

Other 

employees. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Total. 

^ Male. 

Female. 

41 

12 

29 

60 

23 

37 

64 

27 

37 

4 

2 

2 

7 

2 

5 

4 

2 

2 

8 

3 

5 

13 

5 

8 

15 

7 

8 






C 




2 


2 




(!) 

(!) 

( x ) 

32 

8 

24 

56 

19 

37 

0) 

(>) 

C 1 ) 

43 

10 

33 

66 

30 

36 

64 

40 

24 

1 

.... 

l| 

4 

1 

3 

2 

.... 

2 

C 1 ) 

0) 

C 1 ) 

3 

2 

1 

4 

‘3 

1 

6 

3 

3 

9 

4 

5 

10 

7 

3 

0) 

0) 

0) 

27 

6 

21 

31 

18 

13 

4 

2 

2 

8 

1 

7 

6 

3 

3 




2 

1 

1 

7 

2 

5 




1 


1 

3 


3 

9 

1 

8 

22 

3 

19 

14 

6 

8 

1 

.... 

1 

17 

2 

15 

12 

.... 

12 

56 

9 

47 

130 

18 

112 

73 

41 

32 

34 

12 

22 

77 

25 

52 

32 

17 

15 







1 

1 


5 


5 

0) 

0) 

(») 

14 

5 

9 

20 

6 

14 

26 

6 

20 

27 

11 

16 

29 

11 

18 

43 

10 

33 

39 

23 

16 

15 

2 

13 

13 

3 

10 

14 

9 

5 


INMATES AT CLOSE 
OF YEAH. 


All classes. 


o 


367 


23 

80 


10 

264 

457 

10 

33 


46 

237 

26 

30 

3 


209 

6 


222 


100 


Adults. 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

Male. 

Female. 

Male. 

Female. 

94 

77 

104 

92 

5 

10 

2 

6 

15 

14 

22 

29 



4 

6 

10 

4 

139 

111 

80 

73 

153 

151 

1 

9 



11 

22 





25 

21 

33 

38 

74 

92 



18 

8 

4 

26 




3 





39 

26 


76 



89 

75 

200 

169 

41 

50 

64 

54 

6 




i 


15 

23 

.... 


70 

61 



118 

104 

.... 


47 

53 


1 Not reported. 


2 No rule against admission. 






































































































































GENERAL TABLES 


409 


BLIND AND DEAF: 1910—Continued. 


inmates at close of year— continued. 


RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 


VALUE OF 
PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 


Blind only. 

Deaf. 

Blind and deaf. 

Who can speak. 

Who can not speak. 

Total. 

Adults. 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

Total. 

Adults. 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

Total. 

Adults. 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

Total. 

Adults. 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

Male. 

| Female. 

| Male. 

| Female. 

Male. 

| Female. 

| Male. 

| Female, j 

Male. 

Female. 

Male. 

Female. 

Male. 

Female. 

Male. 

Female. 

275 

76 

63 

80 

56 

44 

7 

6 

10 

21 

48 

11 

8 

14 

15 






23 

5 

10 

2 

6 


























80 

15 

14 

22 

29 
















10 

4 

6 






264 

10 

4 

139 

111 




















249 

40 

43 

86 

80 

204 

38 

30 

66 

70 

A 

o 


1 

1 

10 

1 

9 

















31 

11 

20 



2 


2 



46 



25 

21 





















1 

81 

8 

10 

24 

39 

156 

25 

28 

50 

53 






26 



IS 

8 
















5 


5 



2 


2 



18 

4 

14 



5 


5 



3 


3 























65 



39 

26 











76 


76 















• 








532 

89 

75 

200 

168 






1 




1 

209 

41 

50 

64 

54 
















5 

5 














1 

1 









38 



15 

23 











131 



70 

61 


















203 



105 

98 

19 



13 

6 











100 



47 

53 




















.... 











Total. 


m, 392 


13,900 
34,920 


700 

110,362 

141,000 

6,544 

5,510 


30,000 

50,000 

10,290 

5,151 
5,616 
26,695 

16,429 
178,526 
186,624 
2,768 

5,318 

46,417 

64,438 

27,929 


Derived from— 


Appro¬ 

pria¬ 

tions. 


$86,392 


13,500 
16,238 


107,051 

141,000 


Dona¬ 

tions. 


$3,486 


3,061 

30,000 

50,000 

10,000 


366 


23,336 


2,038 

1,106 


1,233 


150,000.... 
66,640 3,703 
1,611 


43,795 
57,185 


27,500 408 


4,412 

1,308 

575 


Care 
of in¬ 
mates 


$250 

2,825 

1,900 

1,690 

45 

8,880 

1,437 


555 


Other 

sources 


$400 

18,682 


700 

3,311 


3,058 
2,083 


40 

288 
2,610 
1,669 

15,151 
19,646 
114,844 
1,157 

351 

1,314 

6,678 

21 


Total. 


$86,392 


12,000 

32,123 


700 

107, 742 
137,222 

5,039 

3,053 


20,000 

50,000 

15,257 

2,983 

1,424 

26,316 

15,293 
171,363 
177,106 
1,356 

5,061 
68,834 

84,848 

31,132 


For 

running 
ex¬ 
penses 


$71,392 


10,000 

32,123 


700 

91,967 
126,294 

0 ) 

3,053 

20,000 

50,000 

10,000 

2,802 

999 

24,430 

14,172 
166,783 
95,305 
1,356 

5,061 
45,795 

58,612 

31,132 


For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 


$15,000 


2,000 


15,775| 
10,928 

0 ) 


5,257 

181 

425 

1,886 

1,121 

4,580 

81,801 


23,039 

26,236 


Total 
(includ¬ 
ing in¬ 
vested 
funds). 


$300,000 


305,000 

0 ) 


400,000 

750,000 

24,102 

28,481 

4, 700 
3,000 

50,000 

26,610 
6, 726 
81,874 

330,000 
1,350,000 
1,433,681 


Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 


$300,000 


80,000 

150,000 


400,000 

750,000 

10,000 

20,000 

4, 700 
3,000 

50,000 

24,000 

2,000 

77,405 

80,000 

1,000,000 

596,255 


63,000 63,000 

585,000 560,000 


730,823 


149,500 


623,993 


149,500 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

7 

8 

9 

10 


11 


Institution number. 




















































































































































































410 


BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS, 1910 


Table VI.— INSTITUTIONS FOR 








NUMBER OF PAID 
EMPLOYEES AT CLOSE 

OF YEAR. 

NUMBER OF 
INMATES 
RECEIVED 
DURING 

INMATES AT CLOSE 

OF YEAR. 






73 







YEAR. 











> 













1 

a 

P 

R 

P 

NAME AND LOCATION. 

Supervised or 
conducted by— 

Class of inmates 
received. 


*3 

e 

V 

t— 
















'd 

<D 

S 

S 

G 

a> 

Teachers. 

uiner 

employees. 





Adults. 

Chil¬ 

dren. 

"3 

tH 

p 

Hi 




P 

P 

O 

«H 

U* 

03 

>* 

ft 

73 

g 

'o 

o 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Total. 

Male. 

Female. 

Male. 

Female. 


RHODE ISLAND. 



















1 

Providence: 

Rhode Island Institute for the 
Deaf. 

520 Hope St. 

State of Rhode Island.. 

Deaf-mutes... 

1876 

Yes. 

13 

1 

12 

13 

2 

11 

13 

6 

7 

74 



34 

40 











SOUTH CAROLINA. 














i 





1 

Cedar Spring: 

South Carolina Institution for the 

State of South Carolina. 

Blind and deaf. 

1849 

Yes. 

16 

6 

10 

/ 

0) 

(>) 

0) 

29 

13 

16 

203 

0) 

(>) 

( i ) 

o) 


Education of the Deaf and the 
Blind. 








SOUTH DAKOTA. 



















1 

Gary: 

South Dakota School for the 

State of South Dakota. 

Blind. 

1900 

Yes. 

5 

3 

2 

8 

1 

7 

•8 

3 

5 

37 

17 

4 

7 

9 

2 

Blind. 

Sioux Falls: 

South Dakota School for the Deaf. 

State of South Dakota. 

Deaf and deaf-mutes.. 

1881 

Yes. 

8 

1 

7 

12 

4 

8 

10 

5 

5 

76 

12 

20 

23 

21 


TENNESSEE. 



















1 

2 

Knoxville: 

Tennessee Deaf and Dumb 
School.3 

629 Asylum Ave. 

Nashville. 

Blind Girls’ Home_ 

State of Tennessee. 

King’s Daughters. 

Deaf and deaf-mutes... 

Blind. 

1845 

lS|pl 

1844 

Yes. 

No. 

18 

6 

12 

37 

2 

10 

27 

2 

28 

3 

13 

15 

3 

254 

10 

34 

23 

9 

98 

99 

1 

3 

Fourteenth St. and Forrest 
Ave. 

Tennessee School for the Blind.. 

State of Tennessee.... 

Blind. 

Yes. 

21 

7 

14 

33 

12 

21 

47 

29 

18 

219 

39 

49 

71 

60 


100 Fillmore St. 





1 

TEXAS. 

Austin: 

Blind Institute. 

State of Texas___ 

Blind. 

1856 

No. 

26 

11 

15 

42 

12 

30 

44 

27 

17 

227 

49 

79 

50 

49 

2 

708 East Eighteenth St. 

Deaf, Dumb, and Blind Institute 

State of Texas. 

Blind, deaf,and deaf- 

1887 

No. 

11 

3 

8 

12 

4 

8 

22 

10 

12 

102 

30 

28 

19 

25 

3 

R. D. 4, Box 77. 

Texas School for Deaf. 

State of Texas. 

mutes. 

Deaf and deaf-blind... 

1856 

44 

17 

27 

40 

14 

26 

51 

32 

19 

434 

128 

102 

106 

98 


1102 South Congress Ave. 







1 

UTAH. 

Ogden: 

Utah School for the Deaf and the 

State of Utah. 

Blind, deaf, and deaf- 
mutes. 

1884 

Yes. 

23 

11 

12 

24 

12 

12 

22 

10 

12 

121 

19 

13 

48 

41 


Blind. 




VIRGINIA. 



















1 

Newport News: 

Virginia State School for Colored 
Deal and Blind Children. 

State of Virginia. 

Blind, deaf, and deaf- 
mutes. 

1908 

Y es. 

6 

3 

3 

3 

1 

2 

25 

12 

13 

74 



45 

29 










WEST VIRGINIA. 



















1 

Romney: 

West Virginia School for the 
Deaf and Blind. 

State of West Virginia. 

Blind, deaf, and deaf- 
mutes. 

1870 

No. 

18 

5 

13 

25 

9 

16 

23 

13 

10 

192 

53 

53 

52 

34 


WISCONSIN. 



















1 

Black River Falls: 

Black River Falls School for the 

State of Wisconsin.... 

Deaf and deaf-mutes.. 

1898 

Yes. 

2 


2 

C 1 ) 

30 

31 

( l ) 

10 

0) 

20 

24 

10 

5 

5 

10 



5 

5 

2 

3 

Deaf. 

Delevan: 

Wisconsin School for the Deaf... 
309 Walworth Ave. 
Janesville: 

Wisconsin School for Blind. 

State of Wisconsin.... 

State of Wisconsin.... 

Deaf, deaf-mutes, and 
deaf-blind. 

Blind. 

1852 

1849 

Yes. 

Yes. 

27 

17 

11 

6 

16 

11 

33 

16 

16 

9 

17 

7 

205 

89 

45 

28 

37 

29 

70 

17 

53 

15 

4 

Milwaukee: 

Wisconsin Workshop for the 
Blind. 

1314 Fond du Lac Ave. 

St. Francis: 

St. John’s Institute for Deaf- 
Mutes. 

State of Wisconsin.... 

Blind. 

1903 

Yes. 

4 

4 


14 

14 


28 

28 

5 

Private organization 
(Roman Catholic). 

Deaf and deaf-mutes.. 

1876 

Yes. 

9 

4 

5 

4 

1 

3 

23 

14 

9 

94 

23 

17 

30 

24 


1 Not reported. 


2 Exclusive of endowment lands. 


3 Includes report of colored department 






























































































GENERAL TABLES 


411 


BLIND AND DEAF: 1910—Continued. 


inmates at close of year— continued. 


Blind only. 


80 


37 


10 

219 

22 ' 

40 


25 


29 


52 


Adults. 


21 


17 


39 

49 

8 


15 


Chil¬ 

dren. 


21 


71 


79 50 


12 


28 

28 


13 


29 


29 


18 


15 


17 


11 


15 


Deaf. 


Who can speak. 


74 


70 


34 


102 


4 

252 

83 

10 

15 

10 

163 


Adults. 


0) 


66 


56 


11 


34 


12 


0) 


Chil¬ 

dren. 


34 


(>) 


11 


46 


5 35 32 


40 


0) 


14 


39 


69 


30 


27 


19 


Who can not speak. 


52 


42 


152 


58 

180 

13 

34 

125 


37 


28 


Adults. 


(>) 


25 


20 

72 


0) 


16 


15 


4 1 


34 


10 


11 


Chil¬ 

dren. 


(') 


12 


52 


35 


20 


33 


12 


0) 


60 


14 


23 


11 


Blind and deaf. 


Adults. 


Chil¬ 

dren. 


1 ... 


RECEIPTS DURING YEAR. 


Total. 


$31,000 

0) 

27,119 
22,313 

52,775 

1,771 
41,820 

•70,915 
23,470 
98,540 

50,000 

10,000 

60,750 

(») 

87,000 

35,000 

8,000 

0) 


Derived from— 


Appro¬ 

pria¬ 

tions. 


$28,000 

(») 

26,000 

19,000 

51,526 

950 

41,820 

70,915 
23,470 
98,540 

35,000 

10,000 

60,000 

0) 

87,000 

35,000 

8,000 

0) 


Dona¬ 

tions. 


( l ) 


$821 


0) 


0) 


Care 
of in¬ 
mates 


$3,000 


0 ) 


Other 


0 ) 


(>) 


0 ) 


1,249 


5 15,000 


750 


0 ) 


0 ) 


PAYMENTS DURING YEAR. 

Total. 

For 

running 

ex¬ 

penses. 

For 

perma¬ 

nent 

im¬ 

prove¬ 

ments. 

$38,500 

$31,000 

$7,500 

(>) 

0) 

C 1 ) 

9,728 

9,428 

300 

19,871 

18,739 

1,132 

52,775 

47,775 

5,000 

1,771 

1,771 


40,112 

40,112 


73,415 

73,415 


23,470 

22,470 

1,000 

98,540 

92,490 

6,050 

50,000 

50,000 


28,500 

10,000 

18,500 

60,750 

46, 750 

14,000 

C 1 ) 

0) 

(») 

89,000 

63,530 

25,470 

39,501 

35,707 

3,794 

5,639 

5,639 


0) 

(*) 

0) 


VALUE OF 
PROPERTY AT 
CLOSE OF YEAR. 


Total 
(includ¬ 
ing in¬ 
vested 
funds). 


$68,500 

0) 

39,500 

84,685 

325,000 

12,000 

192,888 

275,000 
77,000 
425,000 

200,000 

40,000 

100,000 

( l ) 

200,000 

221,586 

«14,242 

0) 


Land, 

build¬ 

ings, 

and 

equip¬ 

ment. 


$68,500 


100,000 


39,500 1 


2 84,685 


325,000 


12,000 

192,888 

275,000 

77,000 

425,000 

200,000 

40,000 

100,000 

(>) 

200,000 

221,586 
6 1,873 

0) 


i Colored only. 


s Includes receipts from land funds. 

o 


Equipment. 


i 














































































































































































































































































































































































. 




























































































































































% 


































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































SO 


















. 
























' 



































































V. 



































































































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■ 
































































































. 
































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